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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-06-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• a 1an I
Courageous Susan Mazze Dies With Father at Bedsri.de;
Orange County's First Kidney Transplant Operation Eai"ls
LONG BATTLE ENDS
Sun nM..ue
• ,,
DAILY PILOT
* * * 10( * * *
ERIDAY. AFTERNOON, :JUNE 27, '1969
VOL .. -.19' 4 ACTiOfu, .... ~ ...
• ! •.
""Judy ··Ga'7e All!)
James Mason Eulogizes Singer R .
NEW YORK (UPI) -Actor J~mes "She needed devotion and love beyond . epublicans
Mason eulogized Judy Garland today as the resources or any of us," Mason said ·
"lhe f\laniest girl in the world" who gave s8dly. Jn As mbJ
more to her audiences and friends than· ·More than 20,000 Garland fans passed se y
she rtteived in return. (Earlier story, her bier at an east side funeral chapel ,
Page S). during the lying-in-state Thursday and B k p ]
The eulogy, released an hour before lhe throogh the early hours of today. Her
funeral of the 47-year~ld singer-actress, husband, Mickey Deans, ordered the body ac roposa
praised Miss Garland as "a person who to remain on view continuously until
gave richl y both to her vast audience and preparations for the I p.m . funeral began
her friends,. but.nee~ to be' repaid:", at Ji a.m.
Her'griiattSl gill.' he said, was tne ability Six ,noumers were in line·wheu the .
"to sing .so tilal it would break you11 chapel doQrs were closed and they were·
heart." I.urned away, disappointed. ·
Sinl{ing Sailboat Signal s
For Help; Eight Aboard
Cutters and aircraft were racing to·Iind
a sailboat sinking somewhere off the
Orange Coast today with eight persons
and ooly a six-man liferaft aboard, fol-
lowing a 7:40 a.m. disaster broadcast.
No one aboard the vessel idenUfled only
as the Valkyrie knew her exact position
except sorftewhere sooth of the Channel
Islands, offering a vast .tearch area.
Spokesmen for the 11th Coast Guard
District's Search and Rescue center in
Long Beach said no furth er news had
been received shorlly before noon.
"We're just not sure where she is," he
added .
A r a d i o broadcast monitored in
t1onterey at 7:40 a.m. said the Valkyrie
had eight persons aboard, OOt neither
Sniper Fires
On Patrol Car
OAKLAND (UPI) -A sniper fired
about six shots today at a Calllarnia
Highway Patrol car and a truck on the
Nimllz FreewaY but no injurlei were
reJ)Orted.
One bullet ripped through the patr-01
car carrying officers James R. Lanier,
29, and J1mes R. Wheeler, 25, near the
lOSth Avenue overpass about 1:30 p.m.
More shola were heard sborUy af.
terward and truck driver Ray Hunter, 56,
Castro Valley, said two bullets hit his
cab, missing him by inches.
Pollce fouod sli: empty aheUs of 30-30
caliber.
they nor the ship's home port were iden-
tified in the Mayday distress call.
Coast Guardsmen in Long Beach said
the 12th C.oast Guard District was main-
taining jurisdiction of the sea seari:b, but
the Southland unit was expected to lake
over ?Jy-noon.
Today's broadcast said the Valkyrie
was almost foundering with water in the
engine compartment clear to the deck
plates and ·a pump would be req'uii'ed to
keep her afloat.
Despjte the fact she ca rried lvlo ·
persons more than her lifeboat is design·
ed to hold, spokesmen said, the Valkyrie
reportedly c a r r i e d lifejackets for
everyone.
She also carried a supply of 22
emergency Dares in case the search
should carry through into darkness ~
night, depending on the Valkyrie's uncer-
tain position.
Coast Guard spokesmen said the
sailboat Jell San Francisco JWle IS en
route lo Santa Barbara, but It was not
determined whether abe put into the Cen·
tral California harbor or pas!<d It by.
Two 9$-(oot patrol cutters, a rescue
helicopter aod a fiud-wina aircraft were
-illspaicmed rrom tht'COaSt Gu•rcl"base' in
the Port ol Los An&elu lo •uisl In the
5fflth.
' 'O pry' Founder Dies
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPl)-Edwin W.
Craig, 71, one of tbe founders of the
Grand Ole Opry and nationally prominent
in the insurance industry. d&ed late
Tbursda7 nfgbl ol a bwl allmenL
I
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan proposed another one cent in-
crease In the sales lax today as part of a
substantially revised tax reform pro-
gram.
Major amendments to his package
were endorsed by Assembly Republicans,
who previously had been bitterly divided.
Sources said the GOP voted 35-3 for the
program in private caucus.
There was no immediate word whether
Democrats would go along with the plan,
scheduled to be heard later today in the
Assembly Ways and Means Committee.
The increase In the sales tax would be
from five to six cents on the doll ar.
Another revenue gainer would be a
readjustment of income tax credits. This
would bring in $7 million. However, mid·
die income taxpayers with large families
would benefit.
The money wou1d be spent for :
-Intreasmg the homeowners property
tax e~mptlon from $750 to $1 ,550.
-Exteriding the h o m e o w n e r s ex-
emption to wel£are recipients and
residents of elder citizen housing develop-
ments.
-Making permanent a 30 percet1t
reduction in the business inventory tax.
-Doubling senior citizens' property laJ:
relief.
-Increasing the standard income tax
deduction from $1,000 to $1,250 for a
single person, and from $2,000 to $2,500
for married couples.
-Eliminlting the sales tax on pros-
thetic devices, fruit juices and cigar·
eltes.
-R·educing assessed values on open
apace lands.
For the Bay Arta Rapid Transit
Distrid counties or Contra Costa,
Alameda and Sao FraociscQ, the sales
tax increase actually woOld mult Jn a
6\; cent f'la· ™-i.ipsia_I!!<• previ?"~1
raised thl! sales tai: m thote counties •
half cent to finance completion of thC
transit system.
Reagan'• legislative budget sponsor,
Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle f~
Riverside), called this "phase one" of the
governor'• tax rtfor.m program. 0 Phase
l~" which Includes vol u n tar 1
"9!hbo1dlng of the state l.ncome tax and a
one percent increate in gross income,
T10W wUI not be pushed aa hard as the ln-
lllal pba ... be said.
,
I
uts
on
Pnewnonla Fatal
Long Battle for Life
Ends for Susan Mazze
Susan Mwe Is dead.
The 17·year-old Santa Ana girl who
thankfully accepted being Orange Coun-
1y's fir st kidney transplant patient lost
the long and courageous battle for the
normal life she never had at 3:55 p.m.
Thursday,
Nurses who had found it difficult to
maintain their composure through the
last hours of the doomed high school girl
finally found it impossible to contain their
grief.
It took ooe bitterly sobbing member uf
the Intensive care unit more than lit
l!'lnutea Thursday nJght to tell a
newsman that the plucky girl who had
battled mounting complications for the
past two weeb "is no longer with us.
"She'i the bravest patient J've known
in more than 20 years on the Wards," tbe
nurse said. "Thert was never a com·
plaint, never anything other than a smile
and a deep faith and conviction that she
we going to get wtll." . • ..
But It was obviOU! to everyone ,n these
last few days that Susan waa in the final
throes or a struggle that really began
with her bJrtb 17 years ago.
Couple Marr.ies
On Anniversary
She and the learn of sur1eon!I who
brought her successfully through he( Jlni-
que operation were finding It more .Ind
more dJ!ficult to withstand the ravapil; of
post-operative complicatlOllJ. NoL the
least of tbose complicatlons·wa1 the hg·
ing pneumonia which finally defied the
effO:rts of her physlcianll.
With Susan at the end was Leonard
Mazze, the father who paured his life
savings and all the money he could lay
his hands on to give his daughter her toth
and final operation.
Unable to be with , her was Florence
Mazze, the devoted mother who Is now
recuperating from her hall of the
transplant surgery -an operation in
which she donated half of her kidney
funclliln lo her 11taP.ii.;lelY m·4ugblir.
That operation proved tragically to be
in vain. Hailed u a complete succeaa: in
i~ first hours, the new· kidney ~d to be abandon~ with lhe oiiaet of com-
plications ancl SU!lln went ·back to the
artificial kidney machine tha t SUJtained
her faltering We In the months before
surgery.
Meuages of sympathy were pour~ In
to the Mazze borne Jn San<8 Ana today.
Many of them came frorq show t>uslness
stars who Pot on • specl•I benefit for lhe
ailing ilrl at the Anaheim Convention
Centerihree.monthl 110., .,.
And there wtre, a famlty spakelman
said, ••many many mesaa1es from people
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP} -Mr. and who never met SUWJ but who closely
Mrs. P•ul H. Thomas of PortJand were followed htr fight for life through the
manied on their soth wedding an-newspapers day by day.
niveraary. ''Susan had a .. lot of frl~," lhe
j'l>ey JVU<-di«>n:ed.aboul .ilJ<•f<S.llJO --~~~t1!.1'l!I. . S.iJ!> koeLlhil~
'and each n!arrled agald. Their -·WU-Vet)# grileful fot eVl!l)'ltilh( lhatif);'
died -hers 11 yea.rs ago1 hi.I last sum· ever done for her. She believed right at
mer. lbe end that everything wu 1oln1 to be
They became reacquainted w b e n just fine and she died bellevlnt: that"
Tbomas telephoned their ooly child, Mrs. Funeral 1ervlces have been schedu1~
R. J. Oliver, and his former wife for OOOll Sunday at Temple Beth Shalom
answered. On June ~ they Oew to Reno in Santa Ana. Burial will follow at Mount
and were mnarried. Olive Cemetery in Costa Meaa.
A wedding recepUon Is planned Satur-Suw'1 parents t.od•Y asked that the
day, with four grandchildren and one Santa Ana servlcea be limited to lhc
great grandchild to watch them cut the family and friends. The burial, however,
wedding cake. will be open to tho public.
.,_ J
ax
Nasser to Visit
Red Countries;
More Talks Set
LONDON (UPI ) -Egyptian Presklt!nt
Gamal ,Abdel Nuser will vii.It the Soviet
Union and other Communi!t countries in
late Aug~t. Arab diplomatic sourcea
h6e said today.
His agenda Includes stops I n
Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and possibly
East Germany, the sourCt!:s said.
Nasser is expected to begin his tour
With several days of talks in Moscow with
Soviet leaders .. Then he will spend two or
three weeks al the Tskhaltubo Health
Center in Georgia ·where he was treated
for sciatica, a nerve ailment, last year.
The diplomats said Nasser was in good
health and the visit to the center was for
foUowup treatment and relaxation .•
fn their Kremlin talk.!l, Nasser aiid.
Russian leaders will resume recent ei; ..
chan~es held in Cairo between Egyptian
offictals and Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko, cove ring lhe big power
talks and.the..M.iddle East_cfisjs, aources
said.
Wti•tlltill'
The momlflgs will be nothing to
write home about, but the week·
end afternoons will .be pretty nice,
with stitishine' and temperatures in
the low 70'8 along ~e coast ..
INSIQE TODAY
Apollo Commander Neil. Arm·
strong "pull§ rank" to be fir1C
man on Clt.e Tl'&OOH, saus former li·V-', ·-~Vfl!<f.':.. eg¥t.ll..,~, .s~, stdrf" ~' 11:: T .. ' ~ .f , ....
Cgcre Vs. "car i•• Huntingto••
OAU.Y PILOT ..... h' 11111r Sii, I I 71
Police officers remove broken motorcycl e from
roadway following. Thursday afternoon collision
• -: with sportocar ·~ lnlersec!ion ol Bushard and • Bnlokhunt S~ in Hunllllglon Beach. Despite
jolling crash, police said, sportscar driver Richard
H. Henderson, I~, Huntingtoo Beach, and motor-
cyclist Barnard J. Garrison, 29, C05ta Mesa, were
not hospitalized.
'
Israeli Forces Nixon Flks to Canada
4~ 'J"mgl of ~~
Ca l
,
1 Ben Het
SAIGON (UPI) -Behind 1 amote
""'-' llld down by ~.
U.S. car10 pla!lll awepl over the beaiOJ-
ed Green Beret camp at Ben He\ for the
first day In three today and dropped 40
tons of supplJes to the ISO-man allied bas-u ' on.
A lOJ1 U.S. Special Fon:es commander
In nearby Koolum 5Bld the approximately
2,000 -North Vietnam ... aurt'WDding Ben
Het for the pul 5.1 dayt bad ac-
compllahed "nothing. notb!ng, nothing"
and called the sJege a slupld move.
There was no letup in the Communist
borQbardment of lhe camp. At least 75
artlllery, mortar and rocktt rounds slam·
med into the poet. Five men suffered · -la a IJ7-borrqe 'lbunday.
A hr.elk Jn the monsoon ~ather now
blanl<el!ng ti>< central hlghlanda opened
the way fof, the twin-engine Caribou
cargo planes wboR crews !Jump bundles
ol auppU.. by porachule oul the bock
dP-®""' knr-level runs .,..,. the out-
~
Propeller-drl ... AIE Skyralder fl<ler>-
bombln led Iba Caribous In, dropping
smoke bombs and firing !tnOke rockets
tba1 cast I pall of white smote cwtr the
camp and obecund the blqer cargo
pllw from CGmmunisl ground -
The packages of food , water and am~
munition fl uttered around Ben Het bu&
the al.liel;I troop& stayed 1n their bunkers,
preferlng to recover the packages after
dark when spotters for the Communist
guns cannot see lhem.
Suspect Lax
At Murder
Arraignment
l...iJtless and apparenUy uncaring,
George A. Vick appeared in Santa Ana
Municipal court today for arraignment on
charsea thl.t be mw-dered a former
Orange Coast Collqe coed in her Twllill
lparlmenl.
Judp Leonard McBride eooUnued ar·
raJ.&mnent until Monday but not 1.mtil he
hid ltrqggled to coovince Vick, %9, of
15411 Pasadena Ave. that be must ha ve
Ille -of .. 1Uorney. . Battle Egyptian,
. Jordanian Thoops For Seaway Anniversary. House Votes
For 'Stopgap'
OK
-Vi<!t told the judge that he dldn't want l~al repr~ntation be it lhrough a
pr1.Jately hired lawyer or the public
defender.
"There may be defenses or iswes that
you aa.a lay person annoti tee," Judge
McBride -blm. "You lbould be repttsehd m IUCb a cbarae."
DAIL 'f l'ILlfT Ii.fl ....,.
By Uallld p,., lelml.U-1
hneli t.rce. today baWed Ell'J")an
and Jordanian tnJops acroa the Mlddlo " ' • Eu! cwe-ll1' Unes. Dlplomallc IOilrcol
dllclosed today that Israeli jets flew unchllle:naed over Cairo Jut week even
lhoqlr ihe early rador warni1Ji sy1l<m
fl.ashed an alarm.
An EgypUan military spokesman in
Cairo reported that Israeli gunners sbe:ll·
ed Etypli.an civilian targets in the
Adablya area about 13 miles $0Uth of
Suez City, early today. He said Egyptian
artillery replied and knocked out the
lsraeli gun sites in a !'12 hour battle, No
... l!:gyptian casualties were reported.
An laraeli mWtary spokolrnal1 reported
tarlier in Tel Aviv tha.t Egyptian and ,Sraell forces dug in on the western and . ·eastern banks of the can.al fought another
In tho!r allnool<llabUy gun duell during
tho night.
A 10-minute machine gun due.I across
the Jordan River cease-fire u5
ls.raelis and ~~. thi5
"'as repmted 6y a :Jordlilian
In Amman. He 5Bld Ihm wm ~on!a
nlan casualUes in tbe ~about
three 'miles south ol the sea walllee
bul that two JOfdan!an ~~t".
""'111ded In I ~Ian!< and ....U-
gun blUle =1=me area oa nmsday.
Reporta Loodoo -Gairo u.ld four JsneU jet Oghters· 'fliw over
Caito on a reconnassiance Mission on
June 17 for between siJ: to eight minu tes
even lho.lgh \hey v.·e.rt spotted on radar
......,, wh<n Ibey irrtftJded into Egypt~
air space:, No anuairtrart guns nnt inl6 al:tioo and Egypliall )UG id fighters
;;.,. scnmbled too Ille ·to coldi the
:jiraell lnvaden, the reports sajd.
f!he report& sa\d that as a ruult of the ~dent, the two top E~an air for<e
9""manden wm (Ind, • completa
fVtrbaul of the air warning defense
~ ordered and ofllcen respons!hle
1« the failure to take military action
a)ainst the Israelis c«irt-marti.aled.
. A spokesman in T .!I A vtv said tft
lirVlf solditn were wounded in &he
artillery uchang., dur!ne the night. He
made no mention of damages.
A few hours earlier, µ:raeU DefenA
lilinl.ster Moshe Dayan bad warned the
Arab stales he wwld -Wu the na-.
lion's ~ fort"e:S ii fighting cootinued
to escalale alon& the ...... r. .. lines.
Warning that Arab commandos att in-
creasing tbeir influence on A r a b
governments. and criticWn.! the current
blj: four talks on a peace plan as en-
couragin& Arab lntransigein, Dayan
5Bld be upects ..,. len$1ons aloo& the
truce llnu imposed alter tbe 1967 war.
DAI L\ PILOT ........... " ........ ------c.-, •••••
c.Nl?N: c:oa.s• P\191..l»tM> c:c.Mln
l.i-t K. W.N ---J td I. c.i., vu,..__.._..,..._
-
...... ......,,.--._..... .. ...... _ .. .....,._,_.._ ...,. __ ......... a. ..... ............ u.-.... ....... ._ ... .._.. ........ ___ ...
.............. Orllllfol bW ,........
~ ........... _ ... I ... ................... ._. __
--.... ..... c---.
a:;a:; ••'".~~ ~ I
~-----c..1111 ...... c:..iw. .. ---.... .... ....., . ...... .... .... ...... ..... --·---· _dllll ......... tlM' ... ... a.-.~ .. ...... _ ............... _. _, -.-...-
MAs.S!!:NA. N.Y. (UPI) -Prealdenl
Nixon joined Canadian Prime !lllnlsler
Pitrn Elliott Trudeau at the border t.o-
d-.y to commemorate the loth an-
n!vemry ol the Sl. Lairrtnee Seaway.
The two helda of st.ate met at the
mooumeot to internaUonaJ friendship on
the Robert M,..._Robert H. Saunders
Power Inm. One leg of the comp&S
Relnx, Mothers;
7 Playgrounds
Open in Valley
Se, . .,, supervised playgrounds opened
\n Founlain Valley this week to take
some of the pressw-e off barried mothers.
Table games, athleUc competitkln and
arts and crafts are avail.ab~ at all seven
sites frow;q 1 p.m. to $ p.m,, Mon<iy
lhrough fllday. '
Eath )loek I movie ("-"'Illy :WJl
Disney 117!e) Is "'°"" al all the pla~ Nut week "Moon Pilot" will be shown on v>riws days at all
plly....,.,.is.
Twu bus trips, July 11 to Universal
Sludioa and Aug. l tentatively to the Los
Angdes City 1.oo, are also on the
playground schedule.
Sites with supeni.sion include the
following schools: Allen, Fountain Valley
Elementary, Harper. McDowell, ~tonroe,
Nieblas and Tamura.
•haped monum'"I ts In the United Stoia
and the other in Canada.
After meeting at the monument. Nil'oo
and Trudeau got into a sedan and drove
lo the Dwight D. Eisenbowtt Iott.
ThouHOds 'A"tre on hand to ireet Nixon
and waving Canadian and American
flags.
The President flew by presidential
helicopter for his meeUng with Trudeau
after landing in Air FOf'Ce One at the
Plattsburgh, N.Y. AFB.
The two freoe work! leaders greeted
each other at the site wbere Queen
Elizabeth and President Eisenhower
dedicated a portioa of the seawicy 10
ytars ago.
After ceremonial opeecba roded!callog
lhe Dwight D. El""""'-lock, Nixon
and Trudeau Oew to Montreal for a tour
of "Man and Hls World," an intm'l•Uooal
exposition on the site ol Expo '67 on De
Sa.lnt,ffele:ne,
Canadian officlah blocked it off for the
day because of possible dtmon&trations.
Ni:ron la.st saw Trudeau when the
prim< mlnbler Yislled W.sli!nlton Mareh
2f and 2S. He" was tbt first wnrld leader
lo meet :1"lth tbl 'bew President in
Washington.
Black Magic Plea Fails
LONDON (UPI) -A Nigerian mother
was sentenced to three months in jail
Thursday for beating her son with an
electric cord because she thought he was
under 1 black mqic spell tbal kepi bJm
small. The woman bad pleaded Innocent.
M .. T f'LOT ,__ ... T...., C..-.
CAROM PLAYER RON IUHLER. f, LINES UP SHOT
In Foum•ln V•lloy, E"int ""' p,.....,.. ., -.,
Surcharge Bill
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -'!'be H°""'
cave finlJ cong:rmional •pproval today
In otopgap legtslation In continue Uuough
July payroll wltllholdfng for the 10 per-
cent income tax surcharge that expires
at midnight Monday. (Earlier story, page
7).
Both Democratic and Republican
leaden predicted the House would ap-
prove President Nixon's tax package -
containing an extension of the tu itself
-on .Pifonday.
The tax bW, as recommended by the
Ways and Meam Committee at Nixon 's
requut, would continue the surtax at its
10 percent rate. for six more months, throu&h 1M9, and at a five pettent rate
for the frrst six months of 1970.
Today 's bill was necc..'8!)', most mem-
bers agrffd, to avoid ch.:'>5 in private
and guvemmentaJ pay oh'..: -a whlch
otberwise would have been 1~ ""ced to
recompute pay checks and recalculate
withholding tot.als for transmlsslon to I.be
Treuury lleporlm"1l
Ev"' most -ll ol the surtax .-ioa joined In urrlnl! pusage of the
emergepcy measure, WtUdi had been ap..
proved. by the Seliale Wednesday.
'Ibey pointed out that today's bill does
not affect the ultimate liability of the tax,
paytr.
Jn the end. thett ••as so little objection
t1ie. bill was passed by" voice vote.
Leaders 90qht to nail down lhe votes
on wt¥ch they wtre count.ing to pim the
tu utensioo bil1 Monday. B o t h
Democ:raLs and Republican managers of
the bUI were conf1dent it would pass.
Tbe bill originally had been set for a
House vote Wedne3day. Il was delayed at
the last minute when a no.se count failed
to produce a majority for it.
RAopubllcms suboequenlly solldlfled
their ranb behind the measure and
Dauocrallc leaders feh they had """1led
enough 9dditional Democratic votes to
put it acros.1, so the \.vte "''as reset for
Monday.
I
Vick &bnlged bl& lboulden, lnoked al
the Judie and llally COllUJleOfed· "11'1 done," ; '
JUdle MtBride appointed the puJ>Jic defender.·
Vlct la 8CC11&ed ol the slaying Wed·
nesday of. ~ p. Adams, 20, whose
body was fbund by police at the Tustin
apartment.
Koowla Says
AMA Head Wanu
'
WORLD TITLE .HER GOAL
Be•uty Conte•l•nt W•ll•c•
Laguna Beauty
Sets Her Sights
On World Title
If the world Isn't Lap.nan Susan
\Vallace's oyster, it Is at least her toal .
Susan is the Laguna Beach represe.n.
Utive to the Miss World Contest.
First step toward that title will be Kin to Get Job . , taken July 1 when the Lagwian w111 com-
• ' pete in the Miu Calilornla-World contest
<;ARDEN CITY. N.Y. (UPI) ~ ·Dr.. In DQwney.
Joim H. Knowlu, ce.nter of the NbVll ad-For a weet. she will be competing
mbiiltration'a f Ir s t 1atemaJ ~ agaimt about 40 other comely ~ for atonn, hu dlarwod . that the bud fl It..
American Medical Association. (AMA·) the California .title.
wants his nephew to h~ tbe nalkn(• The winner of the ~alifornia tiUe "·ill toJ _heellh job for which KnoWles wae· ~i go:on to Baltimore for the Miss
odcin;aJIY slated for a p P o J Pt me D t. •· ·USA·World coo test. Final competition for
(Earlier story, page 4). Miss Wortd will be held in Londoa Newsday, the Long Island newspaper, '
quoted Knowles as saying that the AMA England.
was solely rtsponsible for stallini his ap-Susan, 21 , is a freelance model. She
pointment to the post of assistant graduated from Laeuna Beach High
secretary of health, educaUon and School and now lives in town by herse lf.
"·elfare. He said the A~tA president, Dr. · He.r hobbies include horseback riding and
Dwight Wilbur, "ls anxious to see hiJ mUJ~,media art
nephew in the job," The nephew is Dr.
Richard Wiibur, 46, chalnnan of ihe
California Medical Association,
Knowles told Newsday in a telephone
interview from his Swampscott, ~lass.,
summer home, that the AlitA leadership
wants "their own watchdog on a long
leash he.Id tightly-in Olica.go (the AMA
headquarters dly)."
'"They're afraid I'd be outspoken and
ask the rig!!! quesllom •.. " be 5Bld. Such
quest.ions, he added, "''ould concern the
med.icaJ prolession'f responsibility for
"slcyrockeling doctors' fees" and for
assuring the a\·ailablllty of good medical
care regard!~ of finances.
STARTS TUESDAY, JULY ht
U.S. Copter Crashes,
One Crewman Missing
QUONSET POINT, R.i. (AP ) -A U.S.
helicopter witb four men aboard crashed
early today 70 miles at sea, and ooe
crewman was reported missing, a Navy
spokesman said.
Three crev.m en were rescued, lhe
spokesman reported.
One was injured. but his condition
could not be detennined immediately.
Our Annual Sale will feature meny famous groups, from
such lines as DREXEL, HENREDON, HERITAGE. Also to be
included in the sale are all of the upholstery items in stock,
plus special order upholstery merchandise at substantial
savings. Accessories, lamps and pictures will be reduced.
Don't hesitate ••• come in and make your selections now.
You will be pleasantly surprised at the I a r g e variety of
quality furniture on display now et reel saving"
Drexel's· sale merchandise will be reduced starting Monday,
June 30th.
WI All IOllT POI AMl IMCOMftMllHCI CAUSO ll THI COldilKnON WOil ON WISTCllPP DllYI. THlll IS
WT A.CC.DI & PAlllNe AT '"I llAI OP OUI STOIL
IXCLUSIVI OIALlllS FOft: HIHREDON-DllEXEL -HERITAGE
fO OAYS HO IHTIRIST-LONGER Tl'RMS AVAILABLE OH A~PROVEO CR•OIT
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voe. 62, NO. ·1 s1. ~ SECTIONS, 44 PA.ISES ORANGE COUNTY, CA[IFORNl>i \ FRIDA'Y;.:JUNE 27, 1969
Sales Tax Hike Sought
Reagan Asks Jump to Six Cents; ~OP Backs Plan
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. RAlnlld
Reagan proposed another one cent ln·
crease in the sales tax today as paft,IG('a
substantially revised tax refarm.t.~
gram.
Major amendments to his package.
were endorsed by Assembly Republicans,
who previously had been bitterly divided.
Sources said the GOP voted 35-3 for the
program in private caucus.
There was no immediate word whether
Democrats would go along with .the plan,
scheduled to be heard later today in the
Assembly Ways and Means Committee.
The increase in the sales tax would be
from five to siJ: cents on· the dollar.
Another revenue gainer would: be a
readjustment or income t.a.x credit& This
would bring in ti million. However, mid·
die income taxpayers with large families
would benefit.
The money would be spent for:
-Increasing the homeowners property
tax exempUon from '750 to ,1,650.
-Extending the h o m e o w n e r s ex·
emption to welfare recipients and
residents of elder citizen housing develop-
ments.
-Making permanent a 30 percent
reduction in the business Inventory tax.
-Doubling senk>r citizens• property tit
relief.
-Increasing the standard Income tax:
deducllon from ,1,000 to $1,250 for a
single person, and from $2,000 to $2,500
for married couples,
-Eliminating the sales tax on pros.
thetic devices, !ruit juices and cigar·
eltes.
-Reducing assessed values on open
space lands.
For the Bay Are.a Rapid Transit
District counties of Contra Costa,
Alameda and San Francisco, the sales
tax increase actualJy would result lo •
6'k cent rate. The legislature previously
raised the sales tax in those counUes a
half cent to finance completion of the
transit system.
Reagan 's legislative budget spoosor,
Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle IR·
ruverside), called this "phase one'" of the
governor 's tax reform program •. ~'Phase
two," which includes v o I u n tar y
withholding of lhe state Income tix and a
one percent increase In cross income,
now will not be pushed as hard as I.he in·
itial phase, he said.
Beach Gets Susan Loses Fight for Life
$.704,412 County's First Kidney Transplant Patient Dies
DAIL.Y fllL.OT flMft llJ Teny C.•ln.
CAROM PLAYER ROH BUHLElt, 9, 'Ll~E$ UP StiOT
In Fount1in V11ley, El sing th• Pressure On Mom
Relax , Mothers: Valley
Gets 7 More Playgrounds
Seven supervised playgrounds opened
1n Fountain Valley this week to take
eome of the pressure off harried _n;iothers.
Table games, atttleti~ competition and
arts and crafts are available al all seven
sites from I p.m. lo ~ p.m., Monday
through Friday. Each week a movie (usua.U,y Walt
Disney style.) is shown at all . th~
playgrounds. Next week "Moon Ptlot·
will be shown on various days at all
playgrounds. . Two bus trips, July 11 to Universal
Studios and Aug. t tentatively to the Los
Angeles City 7..oo. a.re also on the
playground schedule. . . . Sites with superv1s1on include the
Listless Sus pect
A ppear s in Cour t
Jn Tustin Slaying
Listless and apparently uncaring,
George A. Vick appeared in Santa Ana
Municipal court today for arraignment on
charges that he murdered a former
Orange Coast College coed in her Tustin
apartment.
Judge Leonard ~1cBride continued ar-
raignment until "tonday but not until he
had struggled to convince Vick, 29, of
15491 Pasadena Ave. that he must have
the services o! an attorney.
Vick told lhe judge that he didn't wan t
legal representation be it through a
privately hired lawyer ar the public
defender.
"Thtre may be defenses or issues that
you 'as a lay person cannol see." Judge
McBride admonished him. "You should
be represented on such a charge."
Vick shrugged his shoulders, looked al
the judge and flatly commented: "It's
done." .
Judge f\.fcBride appointed the public
defemle.r.
Vlclt is accused of the slaying Wed-
nesd1y or Susan C. Adams, 20, whose
body was found by poUce at the Tustin
apartment.
following schools: Allen, Fountain Valley
Elementary, Harper, McDoweU, Monroe,
Niebla.s and Tamura.
Oil Slick Li ability
Bill Wins First Ronncl
WASHINGTON (APJ -A Senate
public works subcommitlee has approved
legislation to make ship owners and oil
drillers fully liable for the cost of clean·
ing up oil slicks and spills.
Approval came Thursday, as Gov.
Reagan's administraton announced in
Sacramento that it was proposing a
closer watch on offshore oil drilling in the
Santa Barbara Channel.
The bill passed by lhe Senate sub·
committee is more stringent than one
passed by the House. last April. It would
place absolute liability for oil cleanup
costs on any shipowners involved, witb
three exceptions.
From HUD
Half of the cost of buying the site for
the Huntington Beach central park was
promised today by the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development
(llUD) as a part ol grants totalling fl.58
million to five agencies.
Huntington Beach is to receive a total
ol f7{)4,412 tor the central city park
project near Golden Wffi Street and
Talbert Avenue.
Tot.al cost of the project ls estimated
at $1.377,225. with the city paying
'688,613, the federal goverrunent a like
amount and the federal government also
paying part of $21 ,0SO io administrative
costs and all of $15,800 for relocttion o(
present property owners.
HUD also aonouooed grants of S29S,533
to Snohomish Coonty, Washington. for
draUlal!" aysiems: $125,625 lo San Fr*n-
cisco for city beautification: $179,845
to Seattle, a community center; .and
$227,268 to Bethel, Alaska, for low rent
tiomes.
Huntington Beach Administrative Aide
Bud 'Belsito has been involved in prep·
aration of the application for federal
assistance for buying the park property
which includes two Jakes in lhe central
part of the city,
He said th is morning that the city
must match $6811,613 of the cost and
pointed out that the voters have approved
a $& million park bond issue to build
several parks including the central park.
Belsito said the city likely will go
ahead with buying the Janel and will be.
reimbursed in the future by the federal
government for the half now being
reserved by HUD.
The City Council now is in the procesi1
of formulating a plan which will lead to
sale of the bonds for the. park. An ad·
verse bond market, however, could hold
up sale of all the bonds at this time,
according to city officials.
Stock Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed almost even today, with investors
re.ported cautious and on the sid$lines.
Trading slowed near the close. {Sec
quotations, Pages l&-17).
Officers said she had been battered on
the bead with a heavy tnst.rument 3.nd
lhen~ot1ted, possibly bY a Pillow.
Cyc le Vs. Car in Huntington
Susan Mane is dead.
The 11.year-0ld Santa Ana girl who
thank!ully accepted being Orange Coun.
ty's first kidney transplant patient Jost
the long and l'Ourageous battle for the
normal life she never had at 3:5$ p.m.
Thursday.
Nurses who had found it difficult to
maintain their composure through the
last hours of the doomed high schoo l girl
finally found it impossible to contain lheir
grief.
lt took ane bitterly sobbing member of
the intensive care unit mJrc than lf>
minutes Thursday night to tell a
newsman that the plucky girl who bad
battled mounting complications for the
past two weeks ''is no longer with us.
"She's the bravest patient 1've known
in more than 20 years on the wards," the
nurse said. "There was never a l'Om·
plaint, ne.ver anything other than a smile
.aqct a deep falth and ,cooviction that she
WU IQing ,to get ·Mll.11
But it was obvJoua to everyone In these
last few days tbat Susan was in the final
throes or a 1trugle tblt reaUy began
with her .birth 17 years ago.
She and the 'team, of surgeons who
brought her succe.mully through her uni·
que operation were finding it more and
more diUicult to withstani:I the ravages of
post-Operative complications. Nol the
least of those complications was the rag.
ing pneumonia which finally defied the
efforts o( her physicians.
With Susan at the end was Leonard
Mazze. lhe father who poured his life
savings and all the money he could lay
Sniper Fires
On Patrol Car
OAKLAND (UPI) -A sniper fired
about six shots today at a California
Highway Patrol car and a truck on ~he
Nimitz Freeway but no injuries were
reported.
One bullet ripped through the palrol
car carrying officers James R. Lanier,
29, and James R. Wheeler. 25, near the
J05th Avenue ovcrpa5S about 1:30 p.m.
More Bhots we.re heard shortly af·
terwo1rd and truck driver Ray Hunter, 56,
Castro Valley, said two bullets bit his
cab, missing him by inches.
•
NIL'f .. K.OT ..... =-... 'lilf::lfW91) ... Vick was arrested aft.er he a1iegedly al·
t.cmpt.ed to commit wlcide by running a
hole froin the exhaust pipe into his stolen
car. Vick was booked oo suspicion C1f
murder. Otfleers said he was also the
subject oL 1n Oregon warranL chargiJll
him wllb aulo then.
Police of£iccrs remove broken motorcycle from
roadway foUowing Thursday afternoon collision
with sportscar at intersection oi Bushard and.
Brookburst Streets In Huntington Beach. Despite
jolling crash, police said, sportscar driver Richard
H. Henderson, 19, HunUngton Beach, and mo\or-•
cyclist Barnard ,J. Garrison, 29, Cl>sl<I Mes•. were
not ho1pllaliled. '
'
I
Susan Min• Q
his lianda on to give his daughter her 10th
and final operation .
Unable to be with her was Florence
Maue1 the devoled mother who is now
recuperating from her half of the
transplant surgery -an operation Jn
which she donated half of her kidney,
function tc.-her desperately iU daughter.
That operation proved tragically to be
in vain. Hailed as a complete success ia
its first hours, the new kidney had to be
abandoned with the onset or co m·
plications and Susan went back lo the
artificial kidney machine that susLained
her fa ltering life io the months before
&urgery.
Messages of sympathy were pouring in
to tbe Mazze home in Santa Ana today.
Mat1y of them came from ahow busine.u
stars who put on a special benefit for the
ailing girl at the Anaheim Convention
Center three moolhs ago.
And there were, a family spokesman
said, "many many messages from people
who never met Susan but who dosely
folJowed her fight fur life throuih tbe
newspapers day by day .
"'Susan had a lot of friends,'' the
spokesman said. "She knew that and she
was very.grateful for everything that wu
ever done for her. She be!Jeved right at
the eod that eveeything was going lo be. Just One and she died believing thlt''
Funeral services have been schedule.cf
for noon Sunday at Temple Beth Sha lom
in Santa Ana. Burial will foUow at Mount
Olive Cemetery in Costa Me11a.
Susan's parents tOday asked that the
Santa Aila 8ef'Vlces be limited to the
family and friends. The burial, however,
will be open to the public.
Final tributes have been suggested In
form of donations to the. City of Hope.
12 Floats Set to Parade
In Huntington Spectacular.
Twelve floats will be on display ln Hun·
tington Beach next week as the Jaycees
present the City's 6.5th annual Fourth of
July Pnrade to thousands of s~lors.
Here is a rundown of the bu11dtrs and
participants who have entered ttie parade
so tar;
City of Anaheim and An ah e i m
Chamber of Commerce: They will
participate for their fifth year in a row:
with a float on the theme of Dr. Sears.
Banjo Pickers and Square Dance. Clu b:·
A 30-ft. float depleting the 49'ers Gold
Rush.
Senator Robert F. Kennedy. Memorial
Society: A float and marching unit with
the theme "Ti.s not too Jate to seek a
newer world ."
Huntington Beach YMCA I n d l a n
f\.1aidcns: A float depicting an early
California lndian scene, complete with
village and waterfall,
City or Costa Mesa and lhe Costa Mesa
Jaycees : A iloat paying tr'ibute to great
men or our time.
Golden West College: Progress in
education Will be the theme of the Hun·
tington Beach junior l'Ollege entry this
year.
U.S. Naval Weapons StaUon, Seal
Beach : A Talas ship to air mJssUe will be
the featured item of the floal.
City of Orange and Oranp Chamber of
Commerce : Sharon Turner, ' • M i " s
on lhls float, their 18th •entry in the Hun-
Orange" and her court will tour the city
tington Beach parade.
McDonald Hamburgers: Ron a Id
McDonald, mascot of the drlvHn chain
will be featured .. the n .. 1. whlr.h la lbe
7th annuaJ enlry of the company,
$trawbel'T'J FestJval of Garden Grove :
R1dlng on the M-toot animated unit wfll
be ;\li,ol Garden Grove and her court.
19th Artillery'Alo lloilftM.Group:' A
cotar JU.ll<l and 1-,0 plalooil, man:hlng . (, . ' '
'O pry' .Founder Dies
• NASHVILLE, Tenn. ·(UPti-:Edw~ '#(.
Cr1lgj 78, one of the founders.-of the
.Ora~ Ole Opry ind natlonally prorpinent
In II/< lnaur111<e lnduatry, dlad laio
,Thundl\!' ~t ol 1 lletrt -
unit will accompany this entry, featuring
I.he Nlke·Hercules surface.to-air ml5sile.
Queen's Float : The Huntington Beach
Jayce.e·sponsored entry will feature Con·
nie Jo Pfister, "Miss Huntington Beach"
and Sarah Martin, "Junior Miss o! Hun·
tington Beach.
Hocl ges Escapes Fire
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) -Luther
H. Hodges. 10, former North Carolina
governor and U.S. secretary of com-
merce from 1961 to 1965, broke a leg
when he juinped from the second story ol
his home as it was .swept by tire Thurs·
day night.
He also suffered smoke Inhalation but
was reported in satisfactory l'Ondition 1n
a hospital.
Orange Caast
Weather
The mornings will be nothing to
write home about, but the week·
end afternoons will be pretty nice,
with sunshine and temj>eralures In
the low 7(1's along the coast.
INSIDE TODAY
Apollo Commander Nnl A rm.-'''ong "pviled rank" to be first
man on the moon, "°"' former NASA •#ooiceH Paul Hane11. Sec
sto"ll Pagt 7.
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Israelis ClaSh With Arabs Ac~oss 1Tr·uce Lines --
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·ll...-he Boldlt!f Hope > ' I
Tax Rebate Bill Stalled
Raldmt& ol Ca!Uomla cooponUv•
bollliDI project& l!ld> as Lel1111n Werk!
.,., not ,.i • 1'111 property tu !<bate II>
lll1ted by A.ssembl)'Dllll Robert H. Bur\e
(ll-Hunlln&1<>n Beach) Ulil yeer, but don'l
II .. up booe.
• Delpit< the fed his bill AB $15 h ala!~
;ec1 In ihe --Comm! ... , the ~ "'10bi Di.strict l~gillltor aUll ho~ out
-hope f«"' ......... "I am punutng every Anglt: available to
pt Ibo lu rellel beoeflla for thole peo-
House Votes OK
For 'Stopgap'
· Surcharge Bill
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The H-
pve final congressional approval today
to ~P legiailUon to continue lllrouP
July peyroll wlthholdlng for the 10 per·
· -income tu oarclw'1• 11111 ezplru at mJdnl&ht Monday. (Elrller atory, page
7).
Both DtmocraUe and Republican
leaden predicted the H""' would •P-
prove Preakfent Nixon'• tu package -
contatnlng en enenelon of Ibo tu ltaeli
-on Monday.
The tu bill, .. rtcommended by lhe
Ways and Means Committee at Nlron '•
requat, woo.Id continue the surtu: at ltl
10 perctnt rate for a1x mon months, thr1Joch 11M59, and at a Ove percent rate
for the flnt aix month! of 1970.
Today'• bill was nectYary, most mem-
ben agreed, to avoid cl\Jol in private
and governmental pay ofUcea which
othawlH would hav.e ~ forced to
r«0111puto pay cheep; and i:oc•~~·to
wllhholdlnl tollls lor .ttlhlmlslloa.,li>)tbe
Tteuury lle!>litm<nt . ~ . I
Even moo! o_,enta ol • l1lriu
-Joined~ '*""' of Ille eJnfl'llDCY melN'( which Mt been ·~ provod by the-. Wednolday.•
They polnt"9 out lhal today'• illll -
not affect.Ille •ltinllle Uobi!Jly of Ibo tu-
payer. ..>. In lhe end, lhere ... ., little,obJ""""
the bill .... ~ .., -.... Leid"' IOU8f!I IO nail ... the 'fOla
on which they :nre ~ pua U.
Ill -loo bib • Both ~.u and~.....,.,. of
the bill w"" conlld«!t " ...Wd pus. '· Tbe biD originally bad been set for a
;Raine vote~· lt WU deia)tild at
: the l»t -wben 1 "*.cam! l.u,t . to praluce I majority for it.
' 8'publlcans 511t>..quenlly solld~lecl
their ranks behind the mea!ure and
DfmocnUc leaders felt they had counted
maagb additional Democratic vote. to
put it ICl"Olll. 10 tbe \IOt.e WIS rttet fot
Monday.
U.S. Copter Craahee;
One Crewman Missing
QUONSET POINT, JU (AP) -A U.S.
helicopter with four men aboard crubed
urly today 70 milu at eea, and one
crewman was reported missing, a Navy
£pokesrnan said.
Three crewmen were reacued. the spokuinan reported.
One waa injured, bJt bll coodlUon
could not he determined immeclllUly.
llhl!Y PllOJ
pie," Burke said today In a Jft11 releue.
He noted thlt sen. Georse Deulan<Jlan
(11-1-lleacb) bas lllo Introduced SB
8111, wbidl ii almilar to hil mwurt liV·
11* cooper-.Jve homeowners a f70 refund
this year and I f75G e:zemptioa next year.
"Al thal ume, I'll try to blvt AB 575
reconeldered," Burke added.
•.jJ've beth worklng very cloeely with
memben ol the ltevtm1< and Tantlon
Committee and the Governor'• office in
htlplnc with the lormulalkln of the tu
reform pactace." Burke contl.nued.
"It'• antkipaltd that the tu: reform
legi1lation will be debated e11 the
AaembJy floor over the weekend so thue
mtHt.tl'es might be approved prior to
budgtt adoption Monday," the Orange
County lawmaker added.
"Even though AB 575 haa been stalled
and mldents of cooperative hOUJing may
noC 1et the flO rebate," he cmcluded,
"the Inclusion of the intent of the bill in
tbe tax refonn package will insure these
people ol the exemption in future years. •l
Planes Drop Supplies
To Besieged Beret Base
SAIGON (UPI) -B<hlnd a emote
...... Wd down by fllll!er.mnben,
U.S. C1Z10 pilnel IWOpl over the balog·
ed Green Beret camp at Ben Het for the
fint day In three today and dropped 40
tom of t11ppllea to tbe SIO-man lilled bas-
Uon.
A top U.S. Speclat Forca CGml!Wlder
In oeerby ltonlum said Ibo 1ppmlmltoly
J;GOO North Vlelnlm-eurroundlng 1!<11
Het for the put U dly1 bad ac·
compllebed "notbinl, nothlnt. nothlnc"
and called ,the alep I atupid MOV9.
'11lere wu no letup in the Cmununiat
bcmblnlmeot of the C1111p. At lout 75
artillery, mortar and rocket rowllil alam·
med Into the pool. Flve men IU!I-
Two Policemen
I '
Win Promotiom -, ~ ~ f l . ,. --. ' O~ Valley Force
Growing with the community it serves,
the FountUn Valley Police Department
Thursday inncunced promotion of two
men to hlptr rank and the addiUon . Of
five men patrolmtn.
Sgt Ray Leglness, 1 IJ.year veteran In
llw mfm:emen~ his been pmnoled to I
new lleuteunt skit required by apanded
departmental operations.
Ptt(olman Bill De NI.II, wipi flvt years'
pnllce aptrlence, wu prunotoc1 to fill
the--·· Job lelt.open by Leglness' new poat.
Five new Officm have been hired to
supplt:m~nt U!f for~. four of tbetn In the
clly'1 19$9:10 ~·I and the fdtb to
replace a PIFOtirutcnlnl to 10 lnto a novel NCUiity . ·
LL Minln F ldelltUiecl the new
men 1'1 the depa,finenta they ere len-
IJI(, u Oflker !lobert McClain, Los
Anplo, Lnt& Barlow, Laguna Buch,
Jllnel Worrell, Stanton, Maurice Collyer,
Santa Ana. and rookie Patrick Coleman.
1 June srllduat< ol Cal State Long
lea.ch'• poUce tclence department..
Officer Worren will roplace Patrolm10
Art Delpdo, who bu qult tbe Fountain
V11it)' PoUce Department to bud tb•
a.curtty department of I retlremel!t
communlly In Mmco. •
LL F-. fllilnl In for vacalklnlng Cblel Cbarles w. Mlchaelt&, lllo ...
nounc«1 ""' intrl-dt[llllmenl Job lhlft& Thunday.
Olllc<r Jeck Mihalik will Join the
defictlve bureau, while Officer Clark c<il'bin Is bllJ1( IWll<hed' lo lnlflc In· -.. ~ .
woundl In a 127-round barrqe Thursday.
A break in the monsoon weather oow
bilni<etlng the centrll hlghlands opened
the way (or the twin-engine Caribou
cargo planes whose crews dump bundles
of eupplles by parachute out the back
door during low-level runs over the out-
poot.
Propeller~rtven AlE Skyralder fighter·
booiben led tbe Carlboua In, dropping
smoke bombs and firing smoke rockets
that cut a pall of wtute. smoke over the
camp and obacured the bigger cargo
planes from Communist ground gunners.
The package. ol food, water and am-
munition flutttrtd around Ben Het but
the aWed ln>ops stayed In their bunkers,
prefering to recover the packages after
dark when spotters for the Communist cuna cannot 8ff them.
There had been no ahortaa:e at the
camp, for two convoys fought the.Ir way
through from Dai: ~o, e miles to the ell~ M~ IOd . y when tho
weather. cloHd la. ht enouih
food and ..ammufti to keep the
defender& ill stock.'
No ground fighting was reported
around the outpost but U.S. headquarters
Jn Saigon reported two Communist
ground attacka early today against hvo
·other, wwtely aeparated American bases,
·In one or .the ground attacks, troopa of
the U.~. 5th Mechanized Inlantry Division
killed ll Communl.!t! trying to storm
their bue southwest of the abandoned
bt.stJon at Khe Sanh. No Americans were
killed.
In the aecond, U.S. 25th Division
&Oldiera northweat of Saigon lost seven
mtn wounded In driving off North Vlet-
n11me1e attackers who left behlrHf 28
bodiea from helicopter gunsh1p strlke.s.
Couple ·Marries
On Anniversary
PORTLAND, Ore. tAP) -Mr. and
Mra. Paul H. Thomu of Portland were
married on their 50th weddinJ an-
nlveraary.
niey were divorced about 44 years ago
and each married aaaln. Their ·9pou.ses
died -hera lJ year1 ago, bil last sum-
mer.
They became reacquainted w h e n
Thomu telepho11ed lhett only child, >..frs.
R. J. Ollvtt, and his former wife
annvutd. On June 3 they flew to Reno
and were remarried.
A wedding ~ption 15 planned S1tur-
d-.y, with four grandchildren and one
lfUl gtlndcl\lld to Witch lbem cut the
wtddln1 ca1r~ OIWfOI COAll t'Ult dMlM COMtoA.llt
1.e~rt N. WMI ' " ,.,....,. .............
J•d1 •• c.tlw
\'1-,,.... .... r..-J -
n..w.1 ic" .. n -Th•-A. M••,hl111 --Al\ltt 'W, l1f1t WIHl1• l1M
A_,.le Hllfl!IMIOll lllKA 1:.i• Cito, N• " ................. ... JOt ltli St!'Mt
M.m .. AMt-P.O. a.. 1'0. f1MI _...._
._. ..... ltll = ... .......,.,. o.... ... ,. ...., ..._ ....... ._
Sin~ibg Sailboat Signals
l '.
FQr Help; Eight Aboard
cutter• and alrcraft •ere nclnl to find
I llilboll.ldnkinl -off the Orange ·CMt todly wltll el&bC penor11
IOd onlr • all·llWI llloraft lbolrd. f~
lowing a 7:to a.m. d1ulttr bl'Oldcul
No one aboard the vtut.I kltot1fied Oftly
11 the Valkyi1e knn her nae! ~
e:rcept unewhtrt IOUib ol. the Ctwmtl
lalands, otferlna a vut ltatth area.
Spok-for the lltb Cout Gull'<l
Dlllrict'a S..rch and l\elall ceni.r In
Long BOlc:ll tald oo !ltrtbor -• llld been re<tlvecl abortly before ,_,_
"We're JU&t not aure wbtre abt ll" lit added. I
A rodlo bn>ldcut moal-In
Monterey ot 7:40 1.m. said the V~
!lad eight -•boll'<l. but nllther tbol' nor the alllp'a homt pOrt wue ldtn-
tlllod In the Mayday d-caU.
eo..i <llllnlmeft In ...... -11111 the IJlll Coast Gt!lrd lliltrlct w .. mil•
talnlng jvrlodlctloo of the Ill Harcb, but
Ille loalbilnd Wiit 'Ill erpectecl to t.aa
over by noort.
Toclq'• -ut n1d the V11lcyrle wu almost foundtrlna with water tn the lftllno COlllparlmtnl Clelr to the declt
pillol and I pump would bl roqulred to
lltep her alloaL
lloapito the foct sbl carried two -"*' thin her IKeboot Is dell11>-eol to hold, opoktam"' llld, Ibo Val);yrle
npert.f4ly ca r r led llfeJtcketa for
IVtr)'llM:.
Siio allo carried a supply of D
e1110rltl!CJ l1aM In C&H 1he IOlr<:h
liloukl cam ihmllh 1111o darkneu to-:e'~ on lhe V11k>'rle'1 UllC<l'-
CoNt· Quan! spolmmen t1ld the
aallboat left san rrw..co June ~ en
route: to Banta Blrbara, but It wu not
ddtrmlned wllether she put Into the Ceo·
ttll Clll/omta harbor or paseed It b).
Tlft '5-foot potrof cutlen. I l't-
llcllcepla Ind a flndoWIJll 1ircrlll w ...
dl~lched rr.m the Coast Guord blae In
th• Port of Los Angele• to wlat In the
search.
aald f"!r llratll jet flahten fitw over
calro oa •a reconnassiance ~ on
Juoe 17 for ttetwttn aix to e.iabt minut~
even though they were spotted on radar
sc~ Whet'\ they tntruded"lnto E&YPt's
air space. ND antiaircraft gun! went into
action and EgyptJan htlG jet fighters
were scrambled too late to cat.ch the
Israeli invaders, the reports said.
The reports saJd that as a resull of the
incident. the two top Egyptian air for ce
DAILY l"ILOT Iliff lttttt.
WORLD TITLE HER GOAL
Beauty Cont11t1nt Wallace
Laguna Beauty
Sets Her Sights
On World Title
lt the ~·orld lsn·t Lagunan Susan
Wall ace's oyster, Jt is at least her goal.
Susan is the Laguna Beach represen-
tative to the fd lss World Contest.
First step toward that title will be
ta ken July 7 when the Lagunan will com-
pete In the Miss Callfornia·World contest
.1n Downey.
For a week, she wl\I be. C1lmpeling
against about 40 other comely lasses for
the California title.
'Mie winner or the California title will
then go on to Baltimore for the Miss
USA.World C1lntest. Final competition for
Miss World will be held in London,
England.
Susan, 21, i! a freelance model. She
graduated from Laguna Beach High
School and now lives in town by herself,
Her hobbies Include horseback riding and
multi-media art.
--""" l1rod. ........... ove"1aul of the air warning Ptfet\M
ayatem ordered and offlcers nli>-tble
for the failure to take military ' 1ctson
against the Israeli! eourt-marUaled. ·
A spokesman in T~I Aviv said two
Israeli soldiers were wounded in the
artillery exchanges during the night. He
made no mention or damages.
A few hours earlier, Israeli Defense
?iflnister ?ifoshe Dayan had warned the
. '
Arab -lie ... --.-.·the ..
lion'• ratrVe farca if fl;titlna contlnu&&
to escalale a!Ollf tjio ctl!O-ffrt u..,.
Warnina-that Arab commaadol are in·
creaalng their lnfluence on A r 1 b
governments, and crillclzlng the current
big rour talks on a peace plan as en.
couraging Arab intranal1tn1ce, o_,an
said he expect.a new tenslODS alone the
truce Uw lmpoted after the 11167 wer.
•Judy Gave All'
James Mcuon Eulogizes Singer
NEW YORK (UPI) -Actor James
Mason eulogized Judy Garland today ' as
"the funniest girl In the world" who gave
more to her audiences and friend! than
she reetived in return. (Earlier story,
Page 5). ·
The eu1ogy, releaaed an hour before the
funeral of the 47·year~ld s:inger-aclreS!,
praised MW Garland as "a person who
gave richly both to her vast audience and
her friends, but needed to be repaid."
Her greatest gift, he said, waa lhe ability
"lo sing so that it would break your
heart."
"She needed devotion and love beyond
the resources of any of us," Muon said
sadly_
More than 20,IXKI Garland fam passed
her bier at an east aide fW>eral chapel
during the lylng-ln-ltal'e Thursday •nd
through the early boors of today . Her
huaband, Mickey Deans. ordered tbe body
to remain on view contlnuoualy until
preparalioM for the 1 p.m. funeral be1an
at 11 a.m.
Sir mourners were ln llne when the
chapel doora were closed and they were'
turned away, diuppolnted.
Nixon Flies to Canada
For Seaway Anniversary ..
MASSENA. N.Y. (UPI) -President
Nixon joined Canadian Prime MinJster
Pierre Elliott Trudeau at the border to-
day to commemorate the 10th an-
niversary of the St. Lawrence Seaway.
The two heada of state met at lhe
monument to international friendship on
the Robert Moses-Robert H. Saunders
Power Dam, One 1 leg of the compass
shaped n:lonument lsiin the United St.ates
and the other in Canada.
· After meeting at the monument, Nixon
and Trudeau got into a sedan and drove
to the Dwight D. Eiser.bower lock.
Thousands were on hand to gfeel NIJon
and waving Canadian and ~American
flags.
The President flew by presldenUal
h~Ucopter for his meeting with Trudeau
· arter landing In Air Force Ona at the
Plattsburgh, N. Y. AFB.
The two free world leaders greeted
each other at the ~lite where ·tut#n
Eliiabeth and President E.iseMowler
dedicated a portion (If the seaway 10
years ago.
After ceremonial speeches rededicating
the Dwight D. Eisenhower lock, Nixon
and Tn1deau fl ew to Montreal for a tour
of "Man and llis World," an internaUoual ·
T,vo SA Markets
Hit by Bandits
lioldup men hit two markets In south
Santa Ana Thursday night and early this
morning and got away with $815.
First to be struck at 9:27 p.m. was the
Tic Toe Market at 1624 S. Slandard Ave.
Two anned men confronted clerk Jerry
Mullins and demanded cash. They got
!600-A lone armed bandit held up night clerk
Anthony DcGuido at the Thriflimart, t:m
W. Edinger Ave. at 2:20 a.m. He got
away with $215. Police did not believe the
two holdups were connected.
exposition on the Ille ol Erpo 167 on ne
Salnt·Helene.
Canldian o!ficlala blocked It OU for the
day becau.se ol possible demonatraUons.
NIJon last saw Trudeau when the
prime mlnl!ter visited Wuhlngton March
14 and 25. He was the first world leader
to meet with the new Pruldent in
Washington.
Let's Celebrate
Moon Day, Says
Westminster Boy
Should July 21 be a naUonal holiday!
Perhaps we could can it "Astro Day" in
honor of the first scheduled American
landing on the mooa.
At least one peraon t!WW it would be a
great idea. And to prove it', 15-year~ld
.David Toole, ol 8960 Unl\Fetse Ave .•
Westminster, sent his suggesUon to
President Niion.
David, a Fountain Valley High School
student, suggested July 21, tentative date
of the American landing on the moon, be
conunemorated and recognized for Its
lrernendous scientific impact.
-·•we already have ~lidays for love
(Valentine's Day ), Ne w Year's, and even
the practical jokes (April Fool's), why
not one for the gnatest !Cientilic feat in
history," wrote Da vid.
He said he struck on the idea while
talking about space expl oration one day
and suddenly realized no one had ever
honored man·s space achievement! in
such a manner.
David's suggesUon was also mailed to
Governor Ronald Reagan, state Senator
John G. Schmitz (R·Tustln) and
Assemblyman Robert Burkt CR-Hun·
tington Beach ).
Summer Safe
STARTS TUESDAY, JULY ht
Our Annual Sale will feature many famous groups, from
such lines as DREXEL, HENREDON, HERITAGE. Also to be
included in the sale ate all of the upholstery item• in stock,
plus special order upholstery metchendise et substantial
savings. Acceuoties, lamps and pictures will be reduced.
'
Don 't hesitate •.. come in end make yout selections now.
You will be pleasantly surprised at the I a r g e variety of
quality furniture on di1play now at real savings.
Drexel's sale merchandise will be reduced starting Monday,
June 30th.
WI All IDllJ POI AMT INCONYINllNCI CAUllO ,, TNI CONSTtVcnDM WO•• ON WISTCUH •••YL TNnl II
WY AC-CDS .. , ••• INI ., THI .... °' OUI no1L
IXCLUSIVI DIALllU fOlt: HINllEDON-DlllX&L -HllllTAGI
90 DAYS NO INTIRHT-LONGlll TlllMS AVAILAILli ON APPROVED tUDIT.
' ·7.1,.,
I NllWPOllT llACH
1121 w .. 1e1111 Or., 641-2050
OPIM fllDAY 'llL t
INTDIORS
LAGUMA llACH
us -c-t Hwy. 4""551
OfM lllttA' 11\ '
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F'rlday, JUM 27, 1%9 DAILY PILOT Jf
Horoscope
I
New 'Skull Look'
-Pis-ces. Eff oFts
Gain Rewards
-l:oss-of-l:ock
Turns to Gain
PLANE CHECK -Narn:y Cunningham, Newport Beach Powder Puff Derby
contestant, checks racing numbers for 23rd annual All-Women Transcontinen·
tal Air Race on JuJy 4. She and other area contestants \vill depart from San
Diego and finish at Dulles International in Washington, D.C.
Area Pilots Up
As Derby Date
By EVELYN SHERWOOD
Of "" Diiiy l'llol "'"
Three Area women pilots
will be competing in the 2.1rd
annual Powder Puff Derby,
July 4, leaving Lindbergh
Field, San Diego, to finish
2,515 miles away at Dulles
International Airport,
Washington. D.C.
They are N a n c y Cun·
ningbam of Corona del Mar,
who will pilot her own plane
with Mary Clare Reedy (If
Newport Beach, a pilot with
heJlcopteri rating, as co-pilot
Mara Culp of Newport
Secretaries
Orange County·liarbor Area
Legal Secretaries Association
meets the third Wednesday of
the month in various places.
Further information may be
abtalned by calling MW
Shtron Drwer, 540-0950.
Members gather at 7 p.m .
Beach, a charter pilot with
Martin Aviation, Orange Coun·
ty Airport, will fly solo on her
first race and Thon Griffith of
Costa Mesa will fly co-pilot for
a San Diego contestant
"We were late entries, 11
Nancy Cunningham, a tall at-
tractive blonde related. "Rac-
ing is a challenge. The plane
was ready, waiting to go and
so were we." This will be a
first race for both.
Daylight flying with vi!ual
flight rules will govern the
race for the 95 planes com-
peting.
Two stops are mandatory,
one at Salt Lake City, Utah,
and the other at Mt. Vernon,
Ill.
There are designated
overnight and refueling stops
along I.he route.
Trophies and cash prizes
amounlin8 to 18.SOO will be
awarded the winners.
Scoring is figured on a han·
dicapped basis from data
• Air
Nears
furnished by plane manufac-
turers.
Two contestanlS will be rac·
ing for the 17th time.
Fran Bera of Long Beach, a
seven-time winner with 17,000
flying hours will be flying for
the 19th time in the annual
women's flying classic.
Westward Ho
Conclave Told
Mrs. Herbert Jennings of
Laguna Beach will host a
meeting for Westward Ho
Chapter, Daughters of the
British Empire at 12:30 p.m.
ftfonday, June 30.
All women of British an·
cestrY are welcome to join the
monthly conclave. Further in·
fonnation may be abtained by
calling Mrs. John Harold, 4~
9511 or Mrs. Jennings, 494· om.
SATURDAY
JUNE 28
By SYDNEY OMARR
TEEN DATING llIN'll!:
One wbo 1ata1 motl attea.doli
II SAGl'ITAIUIJS. Bat LEO ii
most creative ud gains moat
a1rect1oa. Ideal mate b fladtag
eut.-Gf·way t b • a t el or
rt1taarul. Try tomeWag dlf.
f.,..L l!duatlooal project
may IOWld aqaare, bat prom
ucltta.g. SCORPIO ls llkelJ to
get tlle dteck. GEMINI 1tarta
planning a permanent rela-
tlouhlp. CAPRICORN tell
1trongu as evening pro-
gresses. LIBRA comes •P wltll
bright Ideas, dbplay1 humor
and could be We or uy
gathering.
ARIES (Ma""121-AprU 11 ):
What appears good and far is
only an illusion. The grass on-
ly seems greener across the
way. You benefit from home,
famUy environment. Slick to
what you know. Entertain
special vi!ltor.
TAURUS (Apr i I 20-May
20) : Yoo may be harboring
false belief about money,
possesslons. Best to be skep-
tical. Ask to be shown.
Without proof, you leave
yourseU open to deception. Act
accordingly.
GEMINI (May 21.JWle 20):
You can'l get what you want
by being self-userUve. Almost
the opposite course I s
necessary. Means you may
have to play shrinking violet
role. What you need comes :.?
you.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Soft approach is necessary.
Study Gemlnl message. No
day to insls:t, force or cajole.
Take care of your h e a 1 t h.
Avoid excess in speed, drink-
ing and eating. Magnify con-
cept of moderation.
LEO (Ju I y 23-Aug. 22):
Good lunar aspect today a>-
incides with chance for con·
struetive change. Loved ones
benefit. Accent on being
creative. Lead rather than
follow. Be original and in-
dependent.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Practical measures produce
resullS. What you accompl~h
today colors future potential.
Know lb.is and a c t ac--
cordingly. Be aware of detail.!!.
Forego short cuts. SUck to
routine.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
You may watt to move too
quickly. Tl!ero ii dl1tlncl 87 DEB WEDpmv!ll
poulblllly of\Joorney. You es-. N-y~r (•a) -N-' pand activltlts. Your sen.e of -=-..,. ~ nr -0
humor comes to fore. Yoo Simi, lhl 21·yeu-old N..,..
receive me 111 g e from model who made famour the
n!lallve. Nf.W 'STf.W' Mull loot, IOICbed lhl lop
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Vicki L•nn Foll when llbe wu lollng 11U bllr.
What you own and what you ' "Tbe doctor aaid ICIDI PflO"
would Ilk• lo posse,. may be pl• develop ulcen, perhlpo
two diUerent things. Be pa-your hair doeln'l arow:"' h -
Uellt -and shrewd. You can Graduate plalned Mia Simi, """ found get what you need. Ut.ilir.e she w11 eat!n« Im and wor-
mature judgment. ryinc more u sbe lanocbed a
SAGITfAIUIJS (Nov. 22-In the Ar' r moddlnl -· Dee. 21): Cycle h I g b. ''I wu storvJnc my1eU,"
Ciraun.stances turn in your ahe said. "I wanted h1gb cheek
favor. Make new starts in new Among graduates earnlng bones. But I simply can't set directims. Emphaaize originaJ the silver wings of an them. u
approach. Be independent. American Airlines stewardess She h1f!rdleek
Di1p'•• plonee"•• ~lrit. ~--~~ llP,.,:f!'ed •-•-~ --.... ,. from the alrtlnea college in UUli= alN -&MU.I CAPRICORN (!lee. 22.Jan. •--•--•-her .._~ 1•
191 F. f t t d I Fort Worth, Tex., was MW wuwu ~ w .__.. "' : UJe or a en n g tached halrplecn and thus theater. Study your fantasJes. Vickie Lynn Fell of Weslmin-created her DOW famous atull
Many can be transformed to fit.er. loot. Sbe started eattnc aptn
reahUes. What you need today The daughter d Gefald N. ·and plned JO pom1s wbk:h
is reassurance from family Fell of Wesbnlnster bu been went unooUced on her I-foot
member. Inch• Sbe -•~ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-l"eb. assigned flight duty out of 10-irame. now -~·•
18): Don't believe everything New York City. She attended ~· ..... IDd her ba1r la
h Dig be rf college In Sacrament() before a•v .. ..,. utK:a. you ear. · neath su ace training al tile stewardess col-The d au r b t er of a indications. You have chance 1 ~.,. ..._ __ _. .... ...__--er •-d to gain real knowledge. Be e1e. wv1 a -N1Q -.... ...
skeptical but keep open mind. any doubts abe could succeed
PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcll 20): In the fublon -1<1.
Yoo .... reward<d for ettoru. Teenager "It .... the moot Dituri! th'••,11 she aatd ... P.....,,le have Standing In community is .... ·-r
.. -ad druppod oat ef ac:boo1. I A1moat bn•IOdlalol1
the-.. -·-lees.
'lllo llnl -the -w every d&J. '1'11111 for 10 -.
the d!dn~ -1c 1t all.
.. , ,... ID won1td Mt tbft I
did A ~ cammerdaJ, II
the oald. "Now I don't_,,-,!
-llwaJ'I then 11 Wl!M!hlol miuad the-··
An>und the eon>er WU bet
seleetloo u the flnl N .....
model to ·-... lhl -., • major ......... ._,.,._
Ladla Home J-1; lho
Ont lo do color pop In v-. and • trip to l!:llrOpO
f0<'1'bne-ulne.
'1'bll -· .... -to Paris for the fill -la lhl ..... fotllre the bopo!' lo wrtle a boot lo< N..,.. _
to-the-al&
qulrleo .... -... -N ............ -ma ...... Ev-ny llbe would llk1l ..
~ llP. i;:.1'"' ad~
Miii Simi oald .... baa •· _.,.._,..._
In bet Ult. '"lbtn " • palal
wilm beauty -!II"' ~ce." lbe NJd. elevated. Promotion is due. told me I WU j>rtttJ' t1nce I
Accept a d d • d assignment. Vo I u n tee rs ..... Utt!• girl. When I -r.=======:::;
You meet success by accept-lf, I Aid I wanted to do a q. Sat
ing responsibility. cover of Vogue. I hid 1 A: •f
IF T o o A y IS YOUR 5 d fudnlUon wllh eomieu... I H<> BIRTHDAY you are due for ummone _,n•t aUowed to wear lhem '-"I b but I'd try ··-on It·--." slfi.~ cant c ange.s • .ROOlance • 1.11"1:w ,_,l'llf
Is featured. You are ~ Are you at l~t lf years old In June 1K7, abe CIJDe to
dynamic individual w 1 t b ·and willing to volunteer 81 a New York to study design on•
original Ideas. chaperone for a child on acholarahlp at the Fubion
Seniors Call
All Hobbies
Are you a senior clUzen with
a special bobby to share with
others ? Newport Harbor
Senior Citizens are gathering
together a special hobby show
at their club house to display
(In Monday, Junt 30.
Specially requested a r e
ilems of sewing, lmitlin8,
painUne, ceramics, antiques
or collections of any kind.
The group wtll meet at 10
a.m. and the regular games of
cards will fDllow the bobby
show viewing. For further In-
formation about partJclpatlog
in the event. penoos may call
Mn. Aaron Cbrlslensen, 243-
8891.
ootlngs to such appeallng lnltitute of TecbDoloCY. She
place< a1 Di1neyland this llllll· Jnqulnol about the poull>Wty
mer? of eamlnl utra money and
WU tntrocfuced to a friend of a The Newport Beach Para, friend of a pllolognpher. 0n
Beacll and R<ereaUon Depart.-her Ont allll""""'~ llbe
ment ii see1dn1 100 volunteers made the cover of 1be New
to aid in their summer pro-York nmea m111PM. Wettcllff PSm 1-. °"'f'
gram of laking 300 Harbor Alier that llbe ,... flooded Ana yoongmn on the 642·2444
Disneyland trip July 2. and 300 ...,;wl;:lh;,;requala.:==;,:Sbe;:ol:p=IOd=wllh=~=======:: or more to Sea World on Julyli"
16, to Universal Studios on
Aug. 13 and 1to Ringling Bros.
Barnum and Bailey Ci.rtua,
Aug. 20.
Teens who wlsb to join
Operation OUUng may caD the
Volunteer Bureau between I
and 12, 8'2-0983 (Ir Kathy
Bankerd, Mariner& Park, 642-
0'89 from 9 to f.
Volunteer chaperones will be
given free but tronaport&Uon
and free admission to the
~ent:a.
EUROPEAN MUSIC TOUR
IMMACULATE HEART COW&I
$767
Sc .. dllM ~A Pl...,__'111h lo NOT• Cll-"1..,1
July 22 • A~ 12
7 Countries, MU1ic, Special Events, St9hhHin9, Local
Guides. Optional Exten•ion -Spal11 end Portu9al.
4 Units of Ct.alt-No CIMr9t.
,_ loi. ....... , MAii~ TN MA n.uiD, T-i...M
JOJO He1J Dme, AFlf. C, Holian' c:.lf,
Tete,•1111 IZ1JJ 4'f~67
(
• • •
•
,.
J. OAll. y I'll.OT
ROA••FOANIA
PRESENTS TH.llEE.
SAN FRANCISCO
muo·o DDUDI
3 DAYS/ 2 NIGHTS
H Frldl1, Juot 11, 1969 • Chnsuniers~r~"'L~1 ~-.-.,...,l""""P".,..,..,......,.._
Crime Does-
NQt Pay
,•
• OVER THE COUNTER -A·
NASO listings for Thundoy, J..,. 2', IMf
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H1lllburt I.ti ....... w11 .31f Hamm Pap I
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2 Latin: Nations on_Brink of War Over· Soccer .
• • '
•
• •
•
MEXICO CITY (IJPI) -Mulco City
police mobilized a J,700-man security
force to prevent trouble at tonight'& aoc--
ccr playoff between feuding Honduras
and El Salvador.
The game, l;lst in the lbree-game serie.'!:
U\at will decide which country advanees ih regional fir\als to ntlt year'• World
Cup soccer championsbipa. comes leas
than 2t hours after El Salvador broke
dlplomatie relaUons with Hooduru.
The Honduras Air Force put five
transport planes at the HrVlce of its
country's soccer fans for fm trips to
Melico City's neutral turf tor the same.
100,000
Cub Fans
Expected
CHICAGO (AP) -The clragginc SL
Louis CardinaJs Invade paudemonl.wn-
Jitruck Wrigley Field \Oday in danpr of
gulping the same medicine from the ram.
paging Cubs that the Cards spooned out
in winning the 19118 pennant.
For one thing, cardinal Manager Red
Schoeodienst has to eat his bout on bis
club's first trip in April that "lbe next
time m show up in Chicago we'll be 1n
first place."
The Cards enter a lour-game aeries
destined to pack Wrigley Field with more
than 100,000 fans this weekend trailing
the remarkable CUbs by 12 games ill the
National League's Eaat Dlvition.
Second place New York lags by I~
games.
After the Cubs won a 10-innine, bomer-
packed 7-S decision tor a four.game
sweep against Pittsburgh Thursday, Cub
),fanager Leo Durocher asserted:
"At Pittsburgh a week ago. the Pit alts
beat us four straight and were crying 'we
got lhem now.' So they came to town
61Jz games behind and they waltzed out
JO~ hehind.
"Tbe Cardinals won the pennant lut
year beating the clubs they hid to beat.
Tbat'a what we aim to do and we'll play
like hell against them this weekend.''
Jim IDckman. one oE the Olbs pla-
tooning rigbt·fielders who be_lted a came--
winning, two-run homer 10 .the lotb
against the Pirates Thursday, viewed the
Card series pretty much the same way.
"There's still three monUni to go, but
It's still a big 1eries. If they play four
good games, they'll hurt us. lf we play
four good games, we hurt them much
·~orse," said Hickman.
HickmM's deci!live blow was the fourth
Cub homer of the seven-homer game in
which the Pirates lost their 13th stra.lgbt
at \Vrigley Field since July 1961. The see-saw game drew a weekday
!>landing-room crowd of <0,334, Including
29.473 paid in the ladies' day attraction.
The remarkable thing about the CUb
sweep against tile Pjrates was the fae"t: it
•was achleved with a patched lineup, m-
cluding rookie catcher Ken Rudolph,
whose first major league homer Thlll"ll·
day was a two-run blast Ia>«t.ln& the
6Cot'e at 3'3 in lhe sixth.
Regu]ar catcher Randy Hundley, spiked
two days ago , may face the Cardinal! ~
day. Meanwhlle, the Cubs expect lltar 1e·
cond baseman GleM Beckert. who suf·
rered a broken thumb three wetks ago, to
get back inlo action this weekend.
And Sunday, iron-man Cub Billy
Williams should break St.an Musial'•
league record of 895 consecutive games tn
the second game or a twin bill with the
Cardinals.
Outfielder Williams In his 892nd
straight game Thursday cracked a f~st
inning homer and made a game-lummg
lhrow to cul down a Pirate runner at
third in the 10th inning.
"I hope they don't surpriae me too
much with a between·games certmony,
because this is really a big moment in
my baseball career," said Williams.
,Three in Tie
:At Cleveland
CLEVELAND (AP) -Orville Moody. a
r~nt refuge from obscurity, is a man
with a mission.
, "l don't want lo be' the Open Champion
\~rho never won anything else," said the
. ruddy· faced Old Sarge who came out of
•nowhere and won the national cham·
,'plonship.
"I'd hale that. I don't mean I have to
: win everything, but as the National Open
champion, J want to play wtlJ, there'd be
ptisfactlon in that"
Moody. on the rebowld from a bout
;with tons.illltls, made the obteryation
Thursday alter he bad fashionld a three.
•under par 67 and tied red-bot Charle!!
Coody and long shot Jmy McGee for the
li...w.ond lead in the iuo,ooo Cleveland
.open Goll Tournament.
Just one stroke back at 68 wu a trio or
nlative unknowns, Georae Uluon, who •at into the field only beau.le of • late
v!thdrtwa!. Bob Sime, a club pro from
·Independence, Mo .. and Cesor Sanudo.
A hU&e group followed at •. lncludinc
OlarUe Sifford. Frank Burd, 8nlot
Crampton and Al Bolding.
Otftndlng champion Dave Stockton and
Dale Douglass. winner of last week'•
Ktmptr Open, werr, in the group tl 71
whlk! most of lilt 1ame 'a top oamee: wen
W.U back.
._ ---__ _._ -· ----·-· .. .
SaJvadoreans were r~ported cbarterin&
alt lines.
Salvadorean resldentl of the Mexican
capital toot out newspaper ads callina on
their cou.ntrymen to turn out and "give a
shout of support for our team in it.s dil·
flcull encounter with the Hondurana."
Poll~. anxious to Ftver;it riot.Ing like
that which followed the Ortt two matches
in Honduras and El Salvador, put a 1,7(1(1.
man force on alert.
Raul ~fendlolea. acUng Meiico City
Police chlef, warned both sides to
"behave."
Jntemalional soccer authorities had
order<d the playoff set In Mexico to cool
tempers on both 51dea.
Tbe dlplomalJ<: breach grew out of
riv11ry on the aocctr Oeld, where fans
from each country attacked the other's
na\ional team earlier this montf1 here and
in Honduru. ·
Rioting and destrucUon foJlowed, Hon·
duras gave Salvadortans :U hours to
1eave Hoodur~. El Salvador charged
Honduras with "li!ocide1' and both na-
tions appealed fil-an international in-
vestigation.
The feud was sparked by a three-game
seriu of soccer matches to determine a
re&Jonat fhllllll !or nm yur'1 World cup chlmpfGnlhlpo.
After Honduru beat El Salvidor'• na-
>tional team J-0 In the flnt m.11.Cb June t,
\h< vialUn1 Salvldoreans complained that
~e Teauclplpa fans mobbed them with
sticks and stonea and attacked can bear·
ing Salvadorun license plattl.
The next Sunday the Honduran team
went to San Salvador, and wu bcattn.
Salvadortan fans rioted and the Army
moved ill to break It up. Two men died in
the ftacaa and the Honduran team bad to
sneak out ot town.
Repriaals in Horiduras a a a i n 1 t
UPIT1~
YANK SURVIVOR -Arthur Ashe, one o! the 16
singles entrants still alive at the Wimbledon tennis
championships, returns a shot during his match
a struggle. but Ashe finaly prevailed, 6-2, 6-1, 6-2,
13-15, lZ..10. Five of the remaining 16 are Amerl·
cans.
with England's Graham Stilwell Thursday, Jt was
Sports Clipped Short
Allen Ready to Apologize
PHILADELPHIA -Rich Allen, the
Philadetphla Phillies star first baseman
suspended for missing a game, says he
wants to apologize.
Allen appeared Thursday night wilh
disc jockey Sonny Hobson, a friend, on
radio station WHAT.
During the exchange, Allen said, "I'd
like to make it publicly known that I'd
Uke to apologize to my manager, my
teammates and to the fans of
Phlladelpllla.
The small-minded people here who see
me in the wrong will have to learn how to
accept it. The real fans are the ones I'd
like to apologize to."
Earlier Thursday Allen's manager, said
he planned to tell the slugger lo "take his
medicine and U he has any gripes to wait
until not season to iron them out."
•
NEW YORK -Fonner boxing a:ttal
Joe Louis was reported "resting com·
fortably" in a hospital today after he ct1l-
lapsed on a lower Manhattan 1trtet
Thursday.
At first, it was feared that the SS.yell•
old Louis had suffered a heart attack, but
a later report said the collapse wu due
to a physical breakdown.
A spokesman at Beekman·Downtown
Hospital said the ex·heavyweight king
was in "good" condition. He was e1·
peeled to remain in the hospital ror
observation for a few days.
•
NEW YORK -Former quarterback
Joe Namath and football commiuioner
Pete Rm.elle met for two hours Thursday
without reaching any settlement of their
diapute over Namath's ownership of an
ea~t aJde nightclub.
Negotiations are expected lo continue.
"Commissioner Rozelle met with Joe
Namath this afternoon tor a long talk," a
apoi:esman at the commls!ioner's office
aald. "Nothing was resolved and it is e1·
peeled they will meet again."
Later, Namath said "my position
hasn't changed and neither has his ...
•
NEW BRUNSWICK. N.J. -Chari"
"Bud" Wilkinson. one of the n1Uon's
most succe!sful college coaches, lla.s bffn
named to the National FootbaU Foun·
dation and Hall of Fame.
During 17 years as head coach of
Oklahoma, Wilkinson's teams compiled a
139-27·f record, including f7 conaecuUve
victories from 19:>3 to 1957.
\Vllkinson was named Thursday from a
field of five finalists, including Ray Etlot
Illinois; Frank Leahy, Boston College and
Notre Dame; Homer Norton, TU&J
A&M, and Lawrence "Buck" Shaw, Sant•
Clara and Air Force Academy.
•
PENSACOLA, Fla. -Peggy Wilson's
dream of fame 11 years ago might come
true IC she holds on to her lead in the
$30,000 Women's Open Golf Cham-
pionshlp.
The chunky 34-year-old F1orida ~
feuional, who started playing golf after
she dreamed of the thrill d compl!lting
before. a huge gallery, fired t two-under·
par 71 Thursday ror a IM*Stroke margin
going inlo today's ~nd round of tht
most prealigious women's tournament ot
them all.
Cullllo Aid his -try .,..,id Co belcn
the ln1'r·Amerlcon Hum1n Rl&hlll Oom-
mlalloo to chirp El Salvador with "ropo
ol our women, lnaulll., automobiles
cleltroyed, and mocking the llonduru nae and naticMW ulhem ...
El Salvidor .. rllu hid chargod Hoo·
dW'u before the ume commlss.lon wltb
"cenoclde. murder, persecution, attacks.
petlOlll) and property damqe and
mualve npublona of Salvadoruns."
Honduru decllled a ban "' Ill Incle
with El Salvador and cllplomalll feand
the crllJa coold wreck the frll)le Central
Amertcao common marktt
Wimbledon Action
Laver, Emerson
Stop Opponents
WIMllLEDON, Enlllnd <AP) -Dtfen·
clJng champion llod taver of COrooa del
Mar awept Into the fourth round ol the
All·!Dgland Temda ChlmplOlllblpe today
with a 1-t, t-3, W victory over J1n
~y of Denmark.
And NeWJ>Ort Beach'• Roy Emerson
moved forward by atopping Great Bri·
taln'a Stanley Mathews on Thundl)', f.3.
1-1, f.I. Then today he po~ off
G ........ Nicky Kaloeeropouloo. 7-6, 1-3,
f.I.
He was joined by Australian. Frtd
StoJle. who oll!ted MU1n Holecek of
Czechoslovakia 1-2, M, 1-1.
Julie Heldman of New York beta.me
the flnt American woman to enter the
round of ti when she defeated Deniae
Carter of Los Altos. Calif .• f.t, &.t.
She WU jolnad Jhortly lfterwaN by
Mlll'iarel Mlcbel ol Padfic Palisades,
who won over Anita Van .Deventer of
Sj>Uth Africa H, f.I.
-The crowd.I at Wimbledon can help
to defeat a tennis atar -even a cool old
campaigner like Ken Rotewall
'll>e 34-yelMld Au51rallall, upaet by
Bob Lutz ol Loe Angeles In the third
rcund Ttruraday, cmfessed that for the
first time jn his career the fans dilturbed
lib concentraUon.
It's New Skit
By Dodgers:
Who's in First
By THE ASSOCIATED PllESI
With apolo&ies t.o Abbott and Costello,
the Los Anceles Dod1en and Atlanta
Braves are sta1ing their own UtUe
butball !kit called Who's Jn First.
Thursday night's episode, slllrina Bill
Singer and Willie Davis, went to the
Do .. er Slcte
Jv,,. ,,, 8=., s-oi.... 7:5S •·'"" Cl'I l"'I J11ne 2£.1 •IT $en O!Mo, J:U r·'-"·• ICl'I ue J..,. , .,.. •t .. n DI-. 1 :II ''"· ICl'I J11,,. • 0.0.t'l VI .._....,, ,,y: •·'"-• K,I !UOI
DodltT• 3-0, vauJUn1 them back Into first
place in the National J..eaaue Weal by
one-half game over the Braves.
The Dodll'll bad held or shared ""'"d
'Place until they aught and puaed the
Braves Jut weekend.
They fell bad< to leCOlld Wednosday
nl&ht far II boun, but promplly overtook
the: Braves •rain behind Singer'• four-hit
pltchlnt and Davb' homer and two nw
batted in.
Sln1er llarled the winning rally with
a sin&1e tn the th.lrd. moved to aecond on
Maury Willa:' alnalt and ICOl'ed on Willie
Davis' Infield bouncer.
The play aloe allowed Will• to ICOle.
with the Uttlt llhortatop dulilnl borne on
Sonny J1ebon'1 tb:rowtng error.
Davis padded the mlll'gtn with bl•
sevemh home run of the KUOn In tht
•l>lh.
The aame ended the current series
bet-ween the b1tUtrs for the National !.c""''' Weal Dlvtllon lead. Loe Angel"
left with • balf·pme ed&e ever the
Bravea..
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•rew.r I/I • • • I I J•"''-!LA-II t f .t 1 t 1 UMf'llW 1 1 I • • •
Tl'"' -t i• . ..........._. -11,llO,
The match was oo Wimbledon'• No. 3
court. where the tans can wander tn and
out without paying extra adml.alllon
money. 'I11e paths on either side wtre
Junpacked as Rosewall slid to defeat.
Ri1ht opposite is an Illuminated
!cortboard showing the state of the
match on the center court.
"[ wu conscious of the fans jostling
and pushing to try to aee the match,''.
Rosewall said.
"They were watching the scoreboard as
well as our match. The.y cbetred
10nteUmes when Graham SU!well got a
point against Arthur Ashe.
"It was the worst kind of match to
1l1ve on center court at the time, I sup-
pose -a Briti!h player against Ashe.
Naturally, the fans were excited.
"'11\en there was a man in uniform
tl')'in& to control the cruoh and •houtlng
to people to keep moving and not block
the entrance. And 1 could hear buses and
lleavy trucks rumbling past the g1t.e.
"AH this dldn't setm to upset &b Lull,
but It upset me."
The fans who watched Lutz triumph
over Rosewall 8-7, 7·9, 6-3, 6-2 were just a
part of the 30,000 who thronged the all-
Enii:Iand club.
Enthusiasm. for tennis is skyhigh Jim
-partly because of tht publicity given to
Pancho Gonzalez's victory over Oi.arlie
Pasarell.
That match, spread over Tuesday and
Wednesday, broke all records by lasting
112 game!, it was given bigger headlines
in the British press than any other \
Wimbledon match In yean. f
Aahe, suu· strugling to find his lomi, I
won • jittery match 1gain!t SWwell 6-2,
1.f, !-I, 13-15, 12·10.
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•ll•Y f"men.M, NrwpOf't IMCl'I, dlf ... ted s..ni.y
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si.n Sml II. L• Ange1n , cletotl'd O.n Lltvf, l rlo t ltfn, .. ,, 7.5, .. 1.
,.1'111111 O.nt, Avatr1U1, cl•INll'd F"r1nc1l1 J1vtfrt'1 ''Mr.,' .. ,, 6-1, '"4, i.e •.. ,, ' C.rmlj';ltl, o\uttrll 1, defQttd CllfF ltldlty, .,.,, •• , ..,.... .. ..... 1·•~ ..... llA"lll~ lmeno, t/:,'"J. O.fe•IM Altlltncllt M..ttrl~ 1\.1:::~: .. lit<-t;,tf,; ... ~.tfeolllllf Gers14
a.ttrl(k, t rfl1ln, .. l. J.7, .. I~ .U. 6-J. 1111 IOVH"l., Avatr•U•, 11lfeated G~ Gllvtftl
f rtl'tC1, M , 4, -~. Ion Nil~'''• lt11Mnl1, d•lt•td 1<·P!1rre .. /1hflo '~'f:~ ol.ii~N ... t..,';t.nds, cleteatM "°" HOlmM~ l rtoktyn, N.Y .• w, /.C• 6-1, .. ,, 6-2. 11!1rl l vchhe!1, r. 1M1!1, lltfe1tef Lvlac AV91., Clllle, H , 6-2. k #11111'1 D9!111111 "'"' . ..,... Tern Okk..-. Nlff\erl•nd•, •!XI M•nv "'"''"' E,1 •"'"'!• Ill., d<tfffted Patricio Cor.,.I• •nO Jtlme f'llJ..i, Cllflr, •l, t-7, Ml. 0own 0.vhbon. A¥1tr•ll1, Ind Dtrlnls lltJllfen,
l1kt'lll11d.L C•llf,. clet11ted "•trrc1 •-t 1111 Jean Cl'l•fttl'li!, ,.rtnt.I ... ,, ~. '-'· Tl'lomM kod! Incl Edison Mtndlril'l'I l r11!1, ,,...,•ted Jtl""' Plrt!v lrtvo •nd P•lrlcl$ Aoclrlvvt1. c11n,, 6-J. ~ ... i.
O.nl1! Coritsl •!'Id PrtncoK J•vffrlt, "''""'• '•""<ted S...11tl Llkh•cllev Ind o\lu1ncllr AWtreYtllo u» •• 6-J, ...... f·7.
IC"" Fl1fcllerl _A~rtlls, tnd Andrts Ghntno, Sl!ll"' cl1fletld P•ncno 1•ln, Los Anaelts, •niill Ttm MtMlnll\, l erkrl1v1. 1111 •• 1.C, •S. 7.5, .. ._ Cl•l'll G••lbM• ... ew Yo'11. •rid e~ Scolt, St. J'""'t_ N.Y.1 deflltltd Pmnllt Ull tnd Jtl<llD Mllk1r,.1, lno:11l1 k .. ,, f.'-
jl>lerre .. ,w..:;., f'••nc•1• •M Nick\' ftlC!c, :1:1 111 .. •ifffftd 00 ... 1111 •nd ltlclle'4 0.11, '-., t-7. 6-1,,6-2. II er:;•lt, Sovm Alrk1, tnd Jlotff TIY .. '• I• ttln, •lld lttvten krw and T•rrv llv•n. SOvtll Atrlc;1l• • t.'• k J•n nch 'f UICI Jurven U!rkh, DlflrMrk, dlf"l9d' f;f,,·:.~is.on •!Id M. "'rQ.llln. SW1111n0 H, ll>HI.
Phillips Sees
Some Light;
Pilots Arrive
Lefty Phillips, who celebrates his tint.
month today as manager of the
CallfornJa Angel!, &eel Improvement in
his team, detplte its last place Btand.inl
in the: American League's West dJvi&Jon.
Th< Angel& find out how much when
they open a weekend series tonight with
Angel Slcte
,_ ~' ,_,_~la "'•·~,l_!lt ll), S:JJ •·~~ KMl"C
jJ= : ~:::: .. :: i9.tfl:: fi:»1io~,!,'.ll<fM,.c1Hf!,
111>1 ""'"'-It KtllMI Clry, 5:2 •·"'-• KM;C
Toomey Shooting for World Record
the ell*lslon Seattle Pllots in • twinlght
doubleheader. Ge<wae Brunet, U, and
Oreg W1ahbum, 0-1, pitch for C.WomJ1
qal!l!t Mlll'ly Pattin, 7-4, and Mlke
Manhall, H .
"Our pltchina bas betn okay and we've
been hltUng aharptt," Phlllipg oald alter
binc to Minnesota 7""4 ThurlJday af· tunoon. ''Thooe Ill'< piu,..., But tiler.
wmo lhr<e fly balb that •hould have been
c-auaht and they hurt us most of all.•• aAKERSFIELD (AP) -''I think
rm capable of brtaldn& the world record,
but my first UHN&ht ls wlnnlng,.. Bill
Toomei. lhe Olympic deeathlon cbaJn.
pion, 11ys.
The 30-year~ld Toomey ddends his
AAU Decathlon Champtonahlp (he's won
11 four alraight ytan) tonl1bt and Satur·
day night at Baktrllfie1d College.
"I don'l know if I'm in good en®&h
•hllpe for a workf ttCOtd," aaid Toomey,
'
of Laguna Stach.
''It's bard to ctt up for these meet.a.''
Tbe evtnl was scheduled July W in
Salina, Kan., flte of lhe 196' met:t. but
wu changed whfti Toomey, Ruu Hod1e
IJ'ld Rick Sloan complained of conclitiona
In Salina.
Toomty i;ald alhletts competed In 100-
degree temper1tures in Salina.
"'Our motivation primarily w11 for the
athlcleJ," be said Thunday. "The people
of Kansas are more thin ar•clOllll but the
temperaturts aren't quite to kind."
The. presldtnl of the Mlaaourl Vtlley
MU, Dr. Jobo Bogert of K ..... City,
hlS •aid tbe group wlll oeek luD com·
pen"Uon lrom the NaUcioal MU Track
and Field CommiUee lor expenaes In-
curred by the: Sall'na Cbambtt ot Com-
mme In preparing for the cJwn.
plonohlpo, •
The world re<:Ord that Toomty la alm-
lng at in Bakers.neld is held by
G<rma•t• Kun lltndlln -l,S!I poinlll. Toomey a bMn Ovtr 1,000 poinlll ltvtn
tJmes thla year.
Otller top ...... -ant Jeff -nlller ol the Ulllvmlty ol Ntw
Hampo)lln, John Wartenlln of ,,_
state and ROJ ltlDWml a Ulllvenlty ol
COiorado-,,,. wllmtt and ,,,.,,,.rup will he
Amtr1ca·1 -In the decathlao In a track Ind fltld mttl with Roasla In Ihm
•'e<U II the Lot Angeles ColJaeum.
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'tH•Y't1 Fl••I --N.Y."" Sieeb
voe. ~2. NO. '151, ~SECTIONS,~ PA~ES ORANGE COUNTY, CAJ:IFORNIA -FRIOAY. :n:INE 27, '1969
I
Sales Tax Hike Sought
Reagan Asks Jump to Six Cents; GOP Backs Plan
SACRAMENTO (UPI)_;-Gov, Ronald
Reagan proposed anolber one cent in-
crease in the sales tax today u part of a
substantially revised tax refonn P.ro-
gram.
Major amendment.! to his package
were endorsed by ~mbly RepubllCans,
who previously had been bitterly divided.
Sources said the GOP voted 35-3 for the
program in private caucus.
There was no immediate word whether
Democrats would·go along with the plan,
scheduled to be heard later today in the ~bly Ways and Means Committee.
The Increase In the sales tax would be
from five to·ai.1 cents on the dollar.
Another revenue gainer would be a
readjustment of income Lu: crecillS. This
would btjng in '7 million. However, mid·
die income laxpayers with large families
would beMiit.
The money would be spent for :
-I~ing the homeowners· property
tu: exemption from $750 to $1,650.
-Extending the h o m e o w n er s ex·
emption to welfare recipients and
residents of elder citizen housing develop-
ments.
-Making . permanent a 30 percent
reduction In the business inventory tax.
-Doubtln1 mrlor citi:.ens' property ta1
relief.
-Increasing the standard Income tu
deduction from •1,000· to Sl,250 for a
single. person, and from $2,000 to '2,500
for married couples. -
-Eliminating the sa1es tax on pros·
thetic devices, fruit juices aud cigar·
elleJ:.
-Reducing assessed values on open
space lands.
For the Bay Area Rapid Transit
District counties of Contra Costa,
Alameda and San Franci!CO, the ule111
tax increase actually would result in a
6~1: cent rate. The legislature previou!ly
raJsed the sales tax in those counties a
half cent lo finance eompletiQl"I of the
transit system.
Reagan's legl!:lalive budget sponsor,
Assemblyman W. "'traig Biddle (R·
Riverside), called tlm "phue one'' of the
governor'• tax re!orm program. "Phase
two,'' which Includes v o·J u n tar y
withholding of the state Jncome tax and a
one percent increase in gross income,
now will mit be pushed as hard as the ln·
itial phase, be said.
1 Beach Gets
1''
~ ~usan Fight for Life Loses
•
•
DA.IL Y .. ILOT """"' 1111 T•rrY C1vllle
$704,412
From HUD
Hall of the cost of buying the 1ite for
the Huntington Beach central park was
promised today by the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD} as a part of granL! totalling '1.58
million to five agencies.
Huntington Beach i! to receive a total
of $704,412 for the central city park
project near Golden West Street and
Talbert Avenue.
County's First Kidney Transplant Patient Dies
Susan Mazze is dead .
The 17-year-old Santa Ana girt who
thankfully accepted being Orange Coun-
ty's first lddney transplant patient lost
the long and courageous battle · for the
normal life she never had at 3:35 p.m.
Thursday.
Nurses who had found it difficult to
maintain their composure through the
lest hours of the doomed high school girl
fin ally found It Impossible to contain their
grief.
It took one bitterly sobbing member of
the intensive care unit rrnre than 15
minutes Thursday night to teU a
newsman that the plucky girl who had
battled mounting complications for the
pa!t two weeks "Is no longer with us.
recuperating from lier hall o( the
transplant surger)' -an operation in
which she donated half of her kidney;
function tc. her desperately ill daughter. '
That operation proved tragically to be
In vain. Hailed as a complete success in
it.1 first hours, the new kidney had to be
abandoned with the onset of com·
plications and Susan went back to the
arllficiat kidney machine that sustained
her faltering life in the mOnths befora
surgery,
A1essages or sympathy were pouring In
to lhe Maize home in Santa Ana todly,
Many of them came from show busineas
stars ·.vho put on a special benefit for the
ailing girl at the Anaheim Convention
Center three months ago.
CAROM PLAYER RON BUHLER, 9,. LINES UP SHOT
In Fountain Va.llty, Ea1in9 tht Pr•s~urt on Mom ·
Total cost of lhe project i.s estimated
at $1,377,225, with the city paying
$688,613, the federal goverrunent a like
amount and the federal government also
paying part of '21,050 in administrative
costs and all ol $1S,1IOO for n!oca'i'"'-,i
present property owners.
"She's the bravest patient I've known
in more than 20 years on the wards," tbe
nurse said. "There was never a com-
plaint, never anyihlng other, than a smile
and a d~p faith anit~~nviction that she
ll8$ coin& to g¢ welt'' . B\A', ... .,-:i.·ev.,_'~
!astlfew days that Sus4n wu in lhtrf1nal
lhroes of a atrua1e Iha! reolly_ l>elll!
And there were, a family spokesman
said, "many many messages from people
who never met Susan but who closely
followed her fight for life through the
aewspapers day by day.
''llusan.. had a lot of friends," Ibo
1potesman said. "She mew that and abo .
was very irateful fqr everything ~ wu
ever done for her. She believed rJgbt at
U>e end lhat everything wu IOinc lo be
jut! fine and she died believjni !hat" Relax, Mothers: Valley ...
Gets 7 More Playgrounds
HUD also announced gr,nts of $295,533 tc> Snohoml&h Coul'jty, Washington, for
dr!Unage 1)'illDf; .•m.925 to San Fran-
cisco for Citf beauUffc.atlon: $179,M5
to Seattle, a community cenW: ..00
$227 ,268 to Bethel, Alaska., for low rent
homes. . Huntington Beach Administrative Aide
Bud Belsito has ~ invOlved jn prep-
aration of the application for federal
assistance for buying the park property
·which includes two lakes in the central
part of the city.
with tter birth 17 years qo. .
She and Ille team ol 'SU/'f'Olll ""° brough! her suooeafully ~ her unf.
que operlltion were findinc It more and
more dlffJcuh to withstand the ravages of
pos\.-0perative cornpliCaUons. Not the
least of tho,se compllcatforis was the rag-
ing pneumonia which flnally defied the
errorts of her physicians.
Seven supervised playgrounds opened
tn Fountain Valley this week to take
tiOIIle of the pressure off harried -~others.
Table games athletic competlllon and
;arts and crafts' are available at all seven
sites from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday. Each week a movie (usually Walt
Disney style) is shown at all . th.~
laygrounds. Next w~k "Moon Pilot ~ill be shown on vanous days at all
playgrounds. · 1 Two bus trips, July tl to lJruversa
Studios and Aug. 1 tentatively to the Los
Angeles Cily Zoo, are also ()O the
playground schedule. . . . Sites with superv1s1on include the
Listless Suspect
Appears in Court
In Tustin Slaying
Lislk!ss and apparently uncaring,
George A. Vick appeared in Santa Ana
f\.1unicipal court today for arraignment on
charge:1 that he murdered a form~r
Orange Coast College coed in her Tushn
apartment. . .
Judge Leonard fo.icBr1de continu~ ar·
raignmenl until fo.londay but not unbl he
had struggled to convince Vick, 29, of
!&491 Pasadena Ave. that he must have
the services of an attorney.
Vick told the judge that he didn 't want
legal repre.witation be It through ."'
privately hired lawyer or the public
defender. . -lh 1 "There may be defenses or issues a
you a! a lay pe.:SOO ca~oot .~·" Judge
McBride admonished him. You should
be represented on such a charge."
Vick shrugged his shoulders, looked at
the judge and flatly commented: "lfs
done." . Judge McBride appointed the public
defender.
Vic': is accusei:I of the slaying Wed-
nesday of Susan C. Adams, 20, w~o
body was found by police at the Tustin
apartment.
Officers said sbe had been battered on
the head with a heavy lnstrwnent and
lhen suffocated, possibly by a pillow.
Vick was arrested after he allegedly at·
lefl\Pted to commit suicide by runrilnl a
hose from the e1haust pipe lnto his stolen
car. Vick Was booked on SU!piclon of
m~. Officers said he was alao the
subject of an Oregon warrant char;:ini
him with auto thcrt.
following !chools : Allen, Fountain Valley
Element.ary, llarper, McDowell, Monroe,
Niebla! and Tamura.
Oil Slick Liability
Bill Wins First Round
WASlflNGTON (AP) -A Senate
public works subcommittee has approved
legislation to make ship owners and oil
drillers fully liable for \he cost of clean-
ing up oil slicks and spills.
Approval came Thursday, as Gov.
Reagan's administraton announced in
Sacramento lhat it was proposing a
closer watch on offshore oil drilling in the
Santa Barbara Channel.
The bill passed by the Senate sub-
committee is more stringent than one
passed by the House last April. ll would
place absolute liability for oil cleanup
costs on any shipowners involved, wllh
three exceptions.
• •
He said this morning lhat the city
must match '688,613 of the cost and
pointed out that the voter!.have approv~d
a $6 million park bond issue ro build
several parb including the. central .park.
Belsito said the cfty likely will go
ahead with buying the land and will be
reimbursed in the future by the federal
government for the half now being
reserved by HUD.
The City Council now i~ in t~ process
of formulating a plan which will lead to
sale of the bonds for the park. An ad-
verse bond market, however, could hold
up sale of all the bonds at this . time.
.according lb city officiab.
Stock Markeu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed almost even today. with investors
reported cautious and on the sidelines.
Trading slowed near lhe close. (See
quotations. Pages l6-1 7).
Cycle Vs. Car in Huntin9tor1
With Susan at the eod was Leonard
Mazze, the father who poured bis life
savings and all the money he could lay
Sniper Fires
On Patrol Car
OAKLAND {UPI) -A !niper fired
about six shots today at a California
Highway Patrol car and 1 truck on lhe
Nimitz Freeway but no jnjuries were
reported .
One bullet ripped through the patrol
car carrying officers James R. Lanier,
29, and James R. Wheeler, 25, near the
105t~ Avenue overpass about 1:30 p.m.
More shots were heard shortly af-
terwMd and truck driver Ray Hunter, Sfi,
Cas'.ro Valley. 1aid two bullets hit his
cab, missing him by inches.
----~ .. . '
Police oUicers remove broken motorcycle from
roadway following Tbursday afternoon collision
with spo~r at intersection of Bushard and
Brookhura! Slreels in Huntington Beach. Despite
Joillng crash, po · aid, sportac• drlver,'Rlchard
H. Henderson, 1 unUnglO!t lleach, and molor·
cyclis! Barnard ~· :Garn.on, %9, Costa ' Meia, were
not hospitalized. , ·
\ I
.
·LONG llA,TTLE 'INDs'
·Sua•n Maue
his hand.a on to give his daughter. her toth
and final operation.
JJnable to be with her "'' F1orence 1.1azze, the devoted mother who b now
Funeral SUV.,.. "-ve·:Miin lclleduled
for n<iori Sunda)t .. ?e!riplh lleth Shalom
In Santa .Ana. Burial will follow at Mount
Olive Cemetery in Costa Mesa.
Susan's parents today aaked that the
Santa Ana services: be llinued to the
family and friends. Tbe burial, however,
will be open to the public. •
Final tributes have been 1uaeatec1 ln
form of donaUoas to lbe City of Hope.
12 Floats· Set to Parade
In Huntington Spectacular
Twelve floats will be on display. In Hun·
tington Beach next week as the Jayctcs
present the City's 65th aMual Fourth of
July Parade to thousands of spectators.
Here is a rundown of the builders and
participants who have entered the parade
so far:
City or Anaheim and A n a h e I m
Chamber of Commerce: They will
participate for their fifth year in a row
with a float on the theme of Dr. Sears.
Banjo Pickers and Square Dance Club:
A 30-!t. fioal depicting lhe 49'ers Gold
Rush.
Senator Robert F. Kennedy Memorial
Society : A float and marching unit with
the lhemt "Tis not too !ale to aeek a
newer world." '
Huntington Beach 'YMCA I n d 1 a n
Maidens: A float depicUng an early
Callfomia Indian scene, complete with
village and waterfall.
City of Costa Mesa and lhe Costa Meaa
Jaycees: A noat paying tribute to great
men of our time.
Golden West College : Progress In
education will be the theme of the Hur>o
tington Boach junior college entry tbis
year.
U.S. Naval Weapons Station, Seal
Beach: A Talos ship to air mlS!llle will be
the featured item of the float.
City or Orange and Orange Chamber ol
Commerce : Sharon Turner, •'MI • 1
on this noat, their 16th enlry in the Hur>-
Or-an,ge" and her cour.t will toor the city
tington Beach parade. ·
McDoo1kl Han1burger1 : Ron a Id
McDocald, mascot of lhe drive-in cbain
will be featurtd on the Cloat, wbkh is lhe
7th annual entry of the comptny.
ftra•berry FelllvaJ of Garden Grove:
Riding on the 55-foot. animated unlt wlll
be Ml.ss Garden Grove and her court.
19\L Artillery Air llelonae GrOllp : ·A
color guard and two platoon marching
'Opry' Founder Dies
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UJ;'l)-tdwln W.
Craig, 78, ont. or ~ foundtrt of the
Qrand Ole Opry and natiOllally Pr<lmlnenl
In lhe ln.Wa""" indus!rjo, dlld late
Thuroday nllhl 61 a heart a!lmenl. .
r
unit will accompany th is entry. featurina
the Niie·Hercules !Urla~air mJllile.
Queen's Floal: The Hunllnglon Qe.ach
Jaiy~ entry will feature Con-
nie Jo Pfister, "Miss Huntington Beach"
and Sarah Martin, "Junior Miss of Hun·
tington Beach.
Hodges Escapes Fire
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) -Luther
H. Hodges, 70, former North Carolina
governor and U.S. secretary of com-
meree from 1961 to 1965, broke a let
when be jum~ from the second story ol
his home as It was swepl by fire Thura·
day night.
He alao au!fered smoke inhalabon bul
was reported in satisfactory condition 1n
a hospital.
Oraage <:out
Weather
The mornings will be noUting lo
write home about, but the week·
end aitemoons will be pretty nice,
with sunshine and temperatures in
the low 'TO'a along the coaai.
INSIDE TODAY
ApoUo Commar«Ur Neil A.f4.
strong ",,.Ued rank". to ~ ~:
ma11. on the moon, sous fof'flVr
NASA "voict" P®l HatttJI. Set
story Page 7.
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z ~y Pl.'."°T H , '•~ !!!•-• • .
Israe.Iis Clash With Arabs Across • Truce Lines '
.+-~,_...\~-t!--~;..-... -.:...__..;;-.-... -•. -. --Adlllba-----.-----.,-...... -....-,-~~.,-... -,-~~ .. -~-.-.-. ~-.... -~=-~.·-.. llils-, .-dueJ_.-~--;-.---..w..,.-""'1111r-·' -,,,...-.-1 Jtt,....ft:.,;;.,.::....~.~;;; ... ~ .... ~-;:r~t· ~-~.,)llnd;;l:\'";' .;-;-==;~:--iAro~· ·;;;,-;Ill;, .... ~· ri·!je~-;· ~Id~~~ .• ~ ... !
Im.ii, lorcea todioy batUed El)'~n iluofelll',,:;f~~· "'~ .. , . · !Ji,, UM I Coiro oo a reconnasslanca ~ on overhaul al Ill• air warnln1 lion's r<serve lorcos u flghUng contin~o
and J«daJJlan troops across the Middle art1Dery -tnoc;pl Juni.J7 for between eix to ~8 qllnutes system or~ and ofllcer1 res~1e to escalate al011I the cease-rire lines. ~ ceue-Ure. tines. DlplomaUc sourctS Jsraell gun 1sites ln a 2~ hoUr battle. o was reported by a ordanian SJ>O,ke)!iman even though they were spott on radar for lhe fa11uie to take military aelion
dllllCloeM, toda.Y ~at Israeli jets flew Egyptian c&.u.lUe.s were reported. ln Amthan. lie said there were no Jorda· scree.na wheo tbeY intruded Into Egypt's agalnsl the Israelis court·marUaJtd. W'-?1lni lhat Ar•b ~mmand~ are ln·
\
~.over Cairo tut week even An Israell military spokesman reported nlan cMualties in the exchange about air spact. No aodaireraft g\1f15 went into A spakesman In T.:l Aviv said two creasma: their lnfiuenc~ on Arab
thau&h Ule~arly radar warning system earlier in 1Tel Aviv that Egyptian and three mlles south or the Sea Of 'Glllilee action and Egyptian MTG jet fighters Israeli soldiers were W1>Unded In lhe governments, and critlclzing the current =nn. Israel! lore<• dug In on the western and bul 'thal two Jordanian soldlefa were were scrambled too !ale ta catch the artillery exchanges during the night. He big four talks on a peace plan ., en•
An .£ . military spokmnan In taJtetD banks of tl)t canal foo#.!t ~notJ!.er , WOQJ'lded In a 30-mlnute tank and Jriacbine Israeli invaders, tM reports said. made no mention cf damages. couraglng Arab intransigence, Dayan
Cairo .that J1raell iunner1 llhell· tn ,thelr &Lmost111gbtly gun dvdl·durl.ag £\ln battle in lhe same area ori 'nw.rsday. The reports st.Id that as a result of the A few hours earlier, Israeli Defense said he ezpecta new tensions along the
ed EOJ111aD d•W.. lar&elf· IA . Ille Ille Dlll>lo ' ~eporls reaching 4>0don lrotl) Cairo Incident, the two top Egypilan air force Minister Moahe Dayon bad warned the truce lines Imposed alter Ille 11167 war.
Barke HoWipg Hope
Tax Rebate Bill Stalled
Reddenlt of Calllomla cooperaUve
housinl projects eucb u LeisW"e World
may nol 1et a f10 property tu rebate ln·
ili1ted by ~mblyman Robert H. Burke
(R·Huntington Beach) this year, but don"t
give up h911t. -r
Deopll< !be fact !ill bill AB 575 Is stall·
ed In Ille Sena!< Finance Conm1itlee, the
10th District leglslatof sun holds out
·some hope for its 1>&¥U~· .. J am pursuing every 'angle available lo
. get the tu relld benefits for theae peo-
House Votes OK
For 'Stopgap'
Surcharge Bill
WASffiNGTON (UPI) -The House
iav• final congressional apProval today
to stopgap legislation to conUnue through
July payroll withhold ing for the 10 per·
cent income tax surcharge thal upires
at midnight Monday. (Earlier story, page
7].
Both Democratic and Republican
leaden predicted the House would ap-
prove President Nb:on's t.aJ package -
containing an extension of the tu ltseU
-on Monday.
The tax bill, as reeommended by the
\\'ays and Means Commlttee al Nixon's
request, would continue the surtax at its
JO percenl rate for six more months,
through 1969, and at a five perctllt rate
far the first six months of 19'ro.
Today's bill was necessary, most mem-
bers agreed, to avotd chaos 'in private
and governmental pay offices which
otherwise would have been forced to
rerornpute pay checks : l!Jld ·i;ecalcul8te
withholding tota15 for tilinsmi*lton to tbe
Treasury Department. · ·
Even most opponents of U\f aimaz
exten:!IOO joined In ~ng -GI Ille · emergency meastireJ Wbfcli had: Deen ap-
proved by Ille Senale' Wedn...tay. ,
They pointed oiitlhlt today'• bill dod
not allect the ultlmate llsbWty of the tu·
payer.
ln the end. there was so little objectJon
the bill was pa.Med by voice vo\e.
Leaders sought to nail down the votes
en wble:h they were counting to pass the
tax eztension bllJ Monday. B () th
Democrats aJ\Cf ~bllcan managera of
the bill were confident it would pass.
11le bill originally had been set for a
House vote Wednesday. It was delayed at
the last minute when a 005! cdunt failed
IG produce a majority for ft.
Republicans subsequently !Oltdilled
their ranks behind the measure and
Democratic leaders felt they had coonted
enough additional DemocraUc votes to
put it across, so the vote was reset for
Monday.
U.S. Copter Crashes,.
One Crewman Missing
I
QUONSET POINT, R.I. (AP) -A U.S.
helicopter with four· men aboard crashec!
early today 70 miles at sea, and one
crewman was' reported missing, a Navy
spokesman said.
Three. crewmen were rescued, the
spokesman reported.
One was Injured, but his condition
could not. be determined immediately.
DMlY PilDT
OIAHOa cciiul PUlldtfllfO cow->Jn
l:.M,. N. 'W••' Pr-.1111:111 a Nlllf*
J•'-lr l. Cv•"1 Vka ,,.\$Int ~NI 0.-1!_ ,_...,
Tltolfl•• r. .. ,11 .....
Thom•• A. M11,.,i.;,.,
""'-.... e~11or
IJO..t W. l•l•• WlMl•111 1114 .-.a-1e1, HU01till9"" htOI Etlhar (llf fltltw H........_.._.OHke
lot Ith Stroot
M1il7n1 AJdf,.,.1 r.o. ao. no. tJMI --.._...hid!. Utt ""'' ...... ....,.
toll• /Mu;~.._., • ..,"'"' ...... ~ntLl'llfl.llA-
ple," Burke said today in a press reltue.
He noted that Sen. Gwrge Deukroejlan
(1\.1.001 Beach] haa alao Introduced SB
888, whlcb ls similar to his meastae giv4
Ing cooperative homeowners a f10 refund
Ulis year and a $750 exemption next year.
· "At lhlt Ume, I'll try ta have AB 575
reconsidered," Burke added.
"I've been working very cloM!ly with
merilbera of the Revenue and Taxation
Comtn!tt.ee and tbe Govemor'a office in
helping with t:Jle formulation of the lax
reform package." Burke continued.
"It's anticipated that the tax reform
legislation will be debated on the
Assembly Ooor over the weekend so these
mea!Ures might be approved prior to
budget adoption MQT)day," the Orange
County lawmaker added.
"Even though AB 57S IUiS been stalled
and resident! of t.-ooperatlve housing may
not get lhe $70 rebate," he concluded,
"the inclusion of the int.ent of the bill In
the tax reform package will insure these
people of the exemption in future years."
Planes Drop Supplies
To Besieged Beret Base
SAIGON (UPI) -Behind a smoke
8Cl'een laid down by fighter-bombers,
U.S. cargo planes swept over lhe besleg·
ed Green Beret camp at Ben Het for the
firlt day in three today and dropped 40
tons of supplies to the &SO-man allied bas.
tioc\.
A top U.S. Special F<XW commander
In nearby Kontum aaid tbe approximately
2,000 North Vietnamese IUl'TOUftdlng Ben
Het for the past 52 days had ac-
complished "nOtblng, nothing, nothing"
and called tms Jlege a stupid move.
111ere was no letup in the Communist
bombardment of the camp. At least 75
artiltery, mortar and rocket rounds alam4
med into tbe post. Five mezi suffered
Two Policemen
Win, Prt>mopoW!,
j ;. •.
On valley Foriie
. Growing With the. commtmity it serves.
the Fountain Valley Police Department
Thuriiday announced promotion of two
men to• higher rank and the addition of
five more patrolmen.
Sgt. Ray l;aginess, a 12-year veteran lri
law enforcement, has been promoted to •
new lieutenant slot required by expanded
departmental operations.
Palrolman Bill De Nisi, with five years'
police fixpei:ienct, was promoted to fill
the sergeant'a job left opeq_ by Laginess'
new post.
Five new officers have been hired tG
supplement the force, four ()f them in the
city's l~?O budget and lhe fifth lo
rep~ce a patrolman migning to go into
a novel aecurlty post.
Lt. Marvin Fortitl ldentiried the new
men by the departments they are le.av· ina:. as . Officer Robert McClain. Los
Angela, L<wls Barlow, Laguna Beach,
James Worrell, Stanton. Maurice Collyer,
Santa Ana, and rookie Patrick -COieman,
a June graduate cf Cal S.tate Lone
Beach's police science department.
Officer Worrell will replace Patrolman
'Art 'Delgado, who has quit the Fountain
Valle,y Police Department to head the
securtty department of a reUnment
community in MeJ:Jco.
Lt. Fortin, filling in for vacationing
Chief Cbltles W. Michaelill, also .sn-
nounctd tWG intra-d'epartrntnt job shifts
Thursday.
Officer Jack Mihallk will join the
detective btireau, while Officer Clark
Corbln is be1nl Jwitched to traffic in~
ves:ligation.
wounds In a 127-round barrage Thursday.
A break In the monsoon weather now
blanketing the central highlands opened
the way for the twin-engine Caribou
cargo planes whose crews dump bundles
of 1upplie1 by parachute out the back
door during low-level runs over the out·
poal
Propeller-driven AIE Skyralder fighter 4
bombers led the Caribous in, dropping
smoke bombs and firing smoke rockets
that cast a pall of white smoke ever the
camp and obscured the bigger cargo
planes from Communist ground gunners.
The packages of food . water and am·
munition fluttered around Ben Het but
the allied troops stayed in their bunkers,
prefering to recover the packages after
dark when spotters for the Communist
guns cannot 68.e them.
There had been no shorlcige at the
camp, for lwo convoys fought their way
through from Oak To, eight miles to the
,.. µst, Monday and Tue' when the t Weal.her· ctos·ed in. Tbey· ght enough
food ~and immuniUon o keep the
de/enders lh !itOct.. ,
No groUnd fighting was reported
around lbe outpost but U.S. headquarters
in Saigon reported two Communist
ground attacks early today against l\vo
~ther, widely separated American bases.
Jn ·cne Of the ground attacks, troops of
the U.S. Stb Mechanized Infantry Division
killed IL Communists trying to storm
their base southwest of the abandoned
b;:stion at Khe Sanh. No Ame.ricans were
killed.
Jn the second, U.S. 2$1h Division
soldiers northwesl of Saigon lost seven
men wounded in driving err Nort h Viet-
namese at\,ackers who left behind 28
bodies from helicopter gun.sblp strikes.
Couple Marries
01t Anniversary
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Mr. and
Mrs. Paul H. Thomas of Portland were
married on their 50th wedding an·
11lver11ary.
They were divorced about 44 years ago
and each married again. Their &pauses
died -hers 12 years ago, his last sum-
mer.
They became reacquainted w h e n
Thomas lt!lephoned their cnly child, ?ifrs.
R. J. Oliver, and his former wife
answered . On June 3 they fl ew to Reno
and were. remarried,
A wedding reception is planned Satur·
day, wilh four grandchildren and one
great grandchild to watch them cut the
wedding cake.
Sinking Sailhoa~ Signals
For Help; Eight Aboard
cutters and alrcraft were racing to find
1 sallbolt sinking. somewhere off the
Qrange Coast today with eight penoni
and only a six·r'nan liferaft aboard, fol·
lowing a 7:40 1.m. di&asler broadcast.
No one aboard the \feNel Identified only
as the Valkyrie knew bu txact PoSIUon
except SQmewhere stJ.ilh or tbe Channel
Islands, o<rering a vut lelrch area.
Spokesmen for the tlth c:om '(;ttfnt"
Dlstrlct's Search and Rescue center in
Long Beach 68id no further new1 had
been received shortly before noon.
''We're Jmt not sure where she ls," he
added.
A r ad 1 o broodcJst monitored In
?o.tonterey at 7:40 1.m. Mid tht Valkyrie
hid eight persons aboard, but neAther
they nor the ship's home part were idm·
Ulied In the Mayday dlllrul call
COa.'1 Oumlnnen In Lone Beach old
the t1111 Co11l Guan! District wu l!llln·
talnlng jurlsdlctJon of the su search, but
the SOuthlllnd unit was expected lo tan
ovtr by noon.
Today'• broadeut said the Valkyrie
wu almost foundering with water ln the
engine compartment clear to the deck
plotea and a pump would be required ta
keep her afloat
Despite the fact she carried two
perl0!1< more lhln her liloboat ,Is dtalgn-
ed ta bold, 1poke11111en llid, !be Vall:Yrl•
reporttdly c If r I• d Jilejact111 for
everyone.
She 1100 corrled I IUppJy or 12
tmergency flartt· in we the search
shoold CllTY lhroup Into darkneu to-
nll(bt, ~.P"ndl•c oa the Vtli<Yrl•'• uncer-
tafn po.lUon.
Coast Guard spokesmen said tbc
S8ilbo8t Jeft San Fr111nclsco June 25 en
route to Santa Barbara, but it was not
determined whelhf!r she put into the Ce.n4
lral CaJilornla harbor or passed ti by.
Tw o £foot patrol cutters, a rucue.
hel!coptu and a flxed·wln& alrcrall wm
dispaiched from ttte COl!t Guard bast In
lht Port or Les Angeles ta '"Isl in the
5earth.
DAILY PILOT lteff Pltt'9
WORLD TITLE HER GOAL
Beauty Contestant Wallace
Laguna Beauty
Sets Her Siglits
On World Title
If the world isn"t Lagttnan Susan
Wallace's oyster, it is at least her goal.
Susan is the Laguna Beach repre.5en-
tative to the Miss World Contest
First step toward that title will be
taken July 7 when the Lagunan wi ll ccm·
pete in the Miss California-World contest
in Downey.
For a week. she will be competing
against about 40 other comely lasses for
the Californ ia title.
The winner of the California tiUe will
then go on to Baltimore for the ?11iss
USA-World ccntest. Final competition for
Miss World will be held in London,
England.
Susan. 21 , is a freelance mod el. She
gradualed from Laguna Beach High
School and now lives in town by herself.
Her hobbies include hors~back riding and
multi-media art.
'"Judy Gave All~
James Mason Eulogizes Singer
NEW YORK (UPI) -Actor James
Muon eulogized Judy Garland today as
"the funniest girl 1n the world" who gave
more to her audJences and friends than
she received In return. (Earlier 1lory,
Page 5).
The eulogy, released an hour before the
funeral of the 47·year~ld singer-actress,
pral5ed Miss Garland as "a penon who
gave richly both to her vasl audience and
her friends, but needed to be repaid."
Her greatest glft, he said, was the ability
"to sing so that it would break your
heart."
"She needed devotion and love beyond
the resources of any of us," M.Qcn said
sadly.
More than 20,000 Garland fans passed
her bier at an east side funeral cha pel
during the lying-in-state Thursday and
through lhe early hours of today. •1er
husband, Mickey Deans, ordered the bodv
to remain on view continuously until
preparations for the 1 p.m. funeral began
at 11 a.m.
Siz mourners were in line when the
chapel doors were closed and they were
lurned away, disappointed.
Nixon Flies to Canada
For Seaway Annive~sary
MASSENA, N.Y. (UPI) -Pre•ident
Nixon joined Canadian Prime Minister
Pierre Elliott Trudeau at the border ~
day to commemorate the 10th an4
nlversary of the St. Lawrence Seaway.
The two heads of state met at the
monument to internalional friendship on
the Robert Moses-.Robert H. Saundtrs
Power Dam. One leg of lhe compass
shaped monument l! in the United State..
and the other in Canada.
After meeting at the monument, Nixon
and Trudeau gol into a sedan and drove
to the Dwight D. Eisenhower lock.
Thousands were on hand to greet Nixon
and waving Canadian and American
!lags.
The President flew by presidential
helicopter for his meeting with Trudeau
after landing In Air Force One' at the
Plattsburgh, N.Y. AFB. • .
The two free world leaders greeted
each other at the 1'ilte where Queen
Eliz.abeth and President Eisenhower
ded icaled a portion of the efaway 10
years ago.
After ceremonial speeches rededlcating
the Dwight O. Eisenhower lock, Nixon
and Trudeau flew to Montreal for a tour
of "Man and His World," an international
T,vo SA Markets
Hit by Bandits
Holdup men hit two markets in south
Santa Ana Thursday night aod early this
morning and got away with $815.
First to be struck at 9:27 p.m. was the
Tlc Toe. Market at 1624 S. Standard Ave.
Two armed men confronted clerk Jerry
Mullins and demanded cash. They got
!300.
A lone anned bandit held up night clerk
Anthony DeGuido at the Thriftimart, 1308
\V. Edinger Ave. at 2:20 a.m. He got
away with $215. Police did not believe the
two holdups were ccMected.
STARTS TUESDAY, JULY ht
u~ition on the aite of Expo '67 on Tie
Samt·Helene.
Canadlan officials blocked It oil for the
day because of possible demonstrations.
Nixon last saw Trudeau when the
prime rninJsler visited Wa1hlngton March
24 and 25. He was the first world leader
to meet with the new President in
Washington.
Let's Celebrate
Moon Day, Says
Westminster Boy
Should July 21 be a national holiday!
Perhaps we coul_d call it "Astro Day" in
honor of the first schePuled An1erican
landing on the moon. / ·
Al least one person thinks it would be a.
great. idea. And to prove it, 16-year-old
David Toole, of 8960 Universe Ave.,
Westminster, senl hi! sugg~tion lo
President Nixon.
David, a Fountain Valley }Jigh School
student, sufiigested JuJy ,21 , t.entative date
, ot the American landing on the moon, be
comm,morateci 3nd recognized for its
tremendous scientific Impact.
· "We · already have holidays · for love
{Valentine's Day), New Year's, and even
the practical jokes (April Fool's), why
not one for the greatest scientific feat in
history," wrote David.
He said he struck on the idea while
talking about space exploration one day
and suddenly realized no one had ever
honored man·s !pace achievements in
such a manner.
David 's suggestion was also mailed to
Governor Ronald Reagan, state Senat<ir
John G. Schmitz CR-Tustin ) and
Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hun-
tington Beach ).
Our Annuel Sele will feature many famou• groupl, from
•uch lines as DREXEL. HENREDON, HERITAGE. Also to be
included in the •ale are all of the uphol.tery items in stock,
plu• special order uphol.tery merchandise et subotantiel
sevings. Accessories, lemps and pictures will be reduced.
Don 't h11itate ••. come in and make your 1eleetion1 now.
You will be pleasantly surprised al the I a r g e variety of
quelity furniture on display now at real sevings.
Drexel's sele merchandise will be reduced sterling Mondey,
June 30th.
wt All SOll't K>I ANT IHCONYIMllNCI CAUAI IT 'IHI CONSTHCTION WOil ON WD1'CLIH DllYL fNlll II
WT ACCDI I PAllON• AT ntl llAI °' oua ITOlL
EXCLUSIVI DIALlltS l'oa: HINllDOH-DRIXEL-HlilUTAGE
tO DAYS NO INTIRIST-LONGIR TIRMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED (;llDIT.
NIWJIOIT 11.t.CH
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voe. 42, f.lo. ·1u, '4 ~ECTIONS, 44-,A'GES '"~ ORANGE COUNTY, C>J:IFORNIA FRIDAY, ~(fNE 27, '1'6' :rEN CEN'IS
Down the
Mission
Trail
Clemente Okays
Profitable Trade
· SAN CLEMENTE -A land trade
between Brigham Young University and
this city, which will relieve the city of
4500,000 debt for general obligation bonds,
tias been approved by the City Couocil.
The university will receive the 18.4-acre
site of the old sewage treatment plant at
the north end of town, which is sur-
rounded by the univeniity land. In return.
th: city will acquire an equal-sized site
adjacent to the industrial area of the city,
considered an appropriate location for
new water recreation facilities.
·• 1\'lguel Re%onh1g OK'd
LAGUNA NIGUEL -Rezone of 85
a cres east of Crown Valley Parkway and
Chaparosa Avenue in the north Laguna
Niguel area from agricultural and plan-
ned community use to single family ·
residential has been given finaJ approval
by the Board of Supervisors.
.e Old West Doy Slated
LAKE FOREST -The week of June 30
through July 3 will be "Cowboys and In-.
juns" week, organized by the Lake
Forest Community Assn. The activities
are for children ages 6 through 12.
Monday will feature cowboy and Indian
stories and games, with Tuesday and
Wednesday devoted to lanyards and
headbands in the craft c I a s s e s •
Youngsters will go horseback riding
Thursday, preceding the Fourth of July
fireworks -display sponsored by the local
Jaycees. Additional information may be
obtained by calling 837-6161.
:e Flood Work Bid Set
CAPISTRANO -Bid! will be opened
,July 21 for repair of flood damage in the
· February storms to main 1tnes ol Oraqge
County Watentorks District No. 4 which
eerves the San Juan Capistrano area.
·• Boo1ters R•ise Funds
MISSION VIEJO -ln order to belp
purchase a movie camera to film school
sports, the Mission Viejo Hig}I School
Boosters Club will operate a fireworks
itand Saturday, June 28, through July 4.
'Jbe stand will operate on the parking
lot of the 7-11 Market, across from the
Mission model homes on La Paz Road.
.
Free Unive~ity
Discussion Set
In Laguna Beach
Or. JOhn Wallace, UCI professor, will
present details on his proposed "Free
University of Laguna Beach" at Mon-
day's general ~ting of the Laguna
Beach Coordinating Council.
City councilmen have agreed_ una!1i-
mously not to endorse or ~ve f1nanc1al
aid to the proposed university.
The balance of the meeting will be
made up of elections for the new officers
of the organization. Nominated were Mrs.
Helen Keeley. president· Thomas A.
Morphine, first vice-presi~t; Jan:ies 1'.
Van Rensselaer, second v1ce-pres1dent;
Mrs. Mary Fran Anderson, rte{lrdiog
secretary: Mrs. Dorothy Joyce, corres~
ponding secretary; aod Mrs. Jane Boyd.
treasurer.
·Also nominated as directors are Rev,
William O. Eckel. Robert L. Reeves,
Vernon R. Spitaleri, Bernard F. Syfan
Bild Lila Zali.
The nominating committee was made
up of A. E. "Pat" Worthington. ·chair-
man: Mrs. Anne Campbell, Harry Law-
-rence. Joseph O'Sullivan. and Mbs Bea
\Vhitllesey.
The meeting, open to the public, will
be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Laguna Beach
Federal Savings and Loan community
room, 260 Ocean Ave.
Cycle Scramble
Set in Clemente
One of the country's biggest motorcycle
scrambles will be staged this weekend in
San Clemente when the Dirt Diggers
motorcycle club sponsors a race on
Reeves Ranch between the freeway and
Coa!l Highway.
Ove:r 201000 spectators are upected to
"'atcb the race, to be run over a rough
one-mile course at the north end of the
Reeves rubber planL Cyclta. will range Jn
l.iu tropa -100 cc to 754 ·~ A, special
"oOiitlclJ111U" rice. will )1'" ht[d·~aturdaY· rcir the mmcn. ~ •. t . ,:ii", j
·Action starts at 8:30 1.m. Saturday and
! a.m. Sunday.
DAILY PILOT Sllff l"Mt.
WORLD TITLE HER GOAL
Be1uty Contest1nt Wallace
Laguna Beauty
Sets Her Sights
Ori World Title
If lhe world isn't Lagunan Susan
Wallace's oyster, it is at least her goal.
Susan is the ·Laguna Beach represen-
tative-to the Miss World Contest.
First step toward that title will be
taken July 7 when the Lagunan will com-
pete in the ·Miss Calilornia-W9rld conlcst
in Downey,
F~r a week. she will be competing
against about 40 other comely lasses for
the California title.
The winner of the California title will
then go on to Baltimore for the Miss
USA-World contest. Final competition for
Miss World will be held in London.
England.
Susan,. 21, is a freelance model. She
graduated from Laguna Beach High
School and now lives in town by herself.
Her hobbies include horseback riding and
multi-media art.
Campout Slated
In O'Neill Park
About 80 members of the South Or·
ange County YMCA 's Gray-Y will trek
to O'Neill Park this weekend.
The campout will be attended by mem-
bers from the El ·Toro, Mission Viejo,
and Laguna Beach clubs. The Gray-Y
serves boys ages 9 through 12.
The agenda for the weekend includes
hikes, sports and songs by the camp-
fires.
Laguna Schools Approve
Budget of $2. 7 Million
Coach Talk
In Laguna
Too Late?
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of , ... DellJ P'lllt Sl•lt
Despite a two and a half hour talk
Thursday between resigning Laguna
Beach Higlt School coaches, the school
board oC trustees and LBHS Principal
Bob Reeves, nothing has changed in the
currem coaching controversy.
Parties involved in the closed..<foor
meeting at district headquarters all
generally agree that the discussion
session was enlightening. b u t ac-
complished nothing tangible.
Neither of the opposing "parties have in·
dicated a change in thetr positions,
although all say they understand each
other's positions.
The staJemate involves five high school
coaches who have resigned or requested
leaves of absence from their coaching
positions.
1'he issue according to participants in·
volves coaches' work: load and ad-
ministrative policies.
Some indication today was given that
the marathon discussion session may
have come too late to have changed
anything. ~ t. <· • Norman Bqrucld, baseblll coi(:A. iaid
that if the ..,.. talk 'had -beld
months ago; the COflChiDI problem migjJI
have been averted.
& it is, Borucki said, everyone'• posi·
tion became too inflexible lo be cl\lftled
during the cqnttoversy. ,
He said all parties became too com-
mitted to back down. He noted that the
school board feels as i.f it has to back the
school administration and the coaches
have their own philosophies to maintain.
No elaboration on the details of the
situation were given and school officials
have said only that the executive session
provided "an opportunity for dialogue
whereby assignments were discussed."
High. School Principal Reeves was
unavailable for comment today.
Ed Bowen, assistant varsity football
coach, said that following the meeting, he
felt tbat the school board members were
"sensitive to our position." However , no
indication of a change in policy was
given. he said.
Bowen said the meeting was "a real
11,ood discussion." However, he said that
he will not be coaching next year.
As far as the school athletic program i~
(See COACHES, Page 21
Stock lll•rkeU
NEW YORK {AP) -1'he stock market
closed almost even today. \vith investors
reported cautious and on the sidelines.
Trading slowed near the close. (Sec
quotations, Pages 16-17).
The Dow Jones industrial average at
1:30 p.m. was off 1.16 at 869.12. Gains
continued to lead losses but by a nar-
rower margin than earlier.
llp One Cent
8-cent Hil{e
Reagan Proposes In Tax Rate
Required Sales Tax Boost
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan proposed another one cent in·
crease jn the saJes tax today as part of a
substantially revised tax reform pro-
gram.
Major amendments. to his package
were endorsed by Assembly Republicans,
who previ"ously bad been bitterly divided.
Sources said the GOP voted 35-3 for the
program in private caucus.
There was no immediate word whether
Democrats would go along with the plan,
scheduled to be heard later today in the
Assembly Ways and Means Committee.
The. increase in the sales tu would be
from rive to six cents on the dollar,
Another revenue gainer would be a
readjustment of income tsi.x credits. This
would bring in $7 million. However, mid-
dle income taxpayers with large families
would benefiL
The money would be spent for :
-Increasing the homeowners propert}l-
tax ex.emption from f150 to $1,650. _
-Extending the b om eow n er s ex-
emption to weUare recipients and
resident!: of elder citizen houaine develop-
~~. •• '• ent ·• ... ,iiC.nt
reduc~ ln . lm<n!<JrY ....
-lliullfioe. . ' -· ...... ly tu --'-~I the llandanl Income tu
deducUoa from fl,OOG to fl,250 for a
single person, and from fZ,000 to '2,500
for married couples. ~
-Eliminating the sales tax on pros--
thetic devices, fruit juices and cigar-
eltes.
-Reducing assessed values on open
space lands.
For the Bay Area Rapid Transit
District counties of Contra Costa,
Alameda and San Francisco, the sales
tax increase actually would result in a
f>lfz cent rate. The legislature previously
raised the sales tax in those counties a
half cent to finance completion of the
trans.it system.
Reagan's legislative budget sponsor,
Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle (R-
Rlverslde), called this "phase one" of the
governor's tax reform program. "Phase
two," which includes v o I u n t a r y
withholding of the state income tax and a
one percent increase in gross income,
now will not be pushed as hard as the in-
itial phase, he said.
Biddle said lhfl'e was "no urgency" in
lhe phase two po(t.ion because much of it
wou~ requtre approval by the voters on
the lt'ill ballot.
...,_~~'j ~vision. """"-one" -Id ~' r·~WI $Iii ai'lliWii ln t*'',Tf No\r.Hwould'~""·mllllcm. . " .
Tbe -rty In ~·)iOiioAI Woo~d result m -. · $115 armuat ~aavtnp for th~ ~ bomecnmer .wJtb a 1lO tu rate,
Jllddlt,u)d.
The pacDge will reqnire a two-thirds
vote of each legislative House.
CofC Asking $48,975
To Promote Art Colony
Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
has uked the city for a record $48,975
su pport in the coming fiscal year to han·
die advertising and promotion for the Art
Colony.
The request compans to $39,800 sought
by the Chamber last summer for the cur·
rent fiscal period.
City councilmen last July whittled the
request back to $35,000 and instituted a
tighter system of controls and review of
chamber expenditures.
City Manager James D. Wheaton said
he will have no recommendation about
the request, that it's a policy matter for
councilmen to decide.
He said he has placed the full amount
requested in the preliminary budget
package for whatever action the council
deems appropriate.
It is the eve of the fourth year that the
Chamber has sought bigger money for
bigger promotion. It began in 1966 when
the Chamber went after $35,000 to help
stimulate off.season al'traction to affluent
tourists.
Before bed lax, Wheaton said, Chamber
allocation from the city "used to shuffle
back and forth between $10.000 and
flS,000 annually.''
The Chamber bas argued that in-.
creased promotion by the Chamber Is
something like bread cast upon the
waters, that it multiples business,
economic benefits and 'hence pays for
itself and more in increased sales tax and
bed tax.
Councilmen last year wenl along with
detailed recommendations of Councilman
Richard Goldberg, a former chamber
preaident for three years.
Stating last July that the Chamber had
been somewhat negligent in reporting the
progress of its advertising program.
Goldberg called for a three-man com·
mlttee (including a councilman) to watch
over expenditure of Iund.s. This was in·
stituted.
A tentative $2.7 million budget for ,1•
70 was approved Thursday by truiteel ot
the Laguna Beach Unified Scbool
District.
The $2,7'l9,458 spending schedule ls hu-
ed on an estimated diattict aseeued
valuation of $80 million and· would tequlrt
an estimated tu rate of $2.60 per 100
assessed valuation -an , incraH of
about eight. cents over this year's la'K
rate. The 46-<enl bond interest and
redemption rate may drop a few pennies.
The budget allows for the spending Df.
about $800 per student figured on a11
average daily attendance of aboui :1,000
students.
School officials point out that thiJ ten-
tative budget ls just that, tentative. It is
subject lo change before final budget
adoption in August.
The most important consideration t~
how closely the . estimated assessed
valuation or the district matches the
county assessors tally of district worth.
If the estimate is over the assessor's
figure, cuts will have to be made, whfie if
the estimate is low, the district will have
more money than It figured on and tome
additions can be made to the bud1et.
"One of tbt problems flere 11 tbat we
have to make 'a mnnber of' Jtt•jor
dedalons before !we know how much
iniJney l'•'re 1Qi1!1i 11._pt,:' .Dr. WU!lam Ullom laid. , " "".
To flli'ther tadgle the web of echool
fin.IJ\Ce9, a number ol bills now in the
leglalatlve hopper could affed matters.
The budget calls for the spending of
about '89,000 more for teachers' salaries.
a figure which may change before final
budget adoption depending upon the now
pending aalary talks.
As presently composed, the bud1ri
calls for spending about a,ooo· more
than the district takes in, the diUerence
to be made up by clipping into the 'relerve
account.
Laguna Hills--Fire
Injures"7"orkinan
A workman was injured in a Thtndly
evening fire which caused an eetlmated
Sl ,050 damages to a Laguna Hllls.Lelee
World apartment, the county '1'ln
Department rtPorted today.
William England, 34, Santa Ana .• ,.whn
was Installing a water softener unit in· tht
apartment of George Fahey, 2031-H
Mariposa East, received second degree
burns on hls left hand when a leak.inc
welding tank caught fire.
Four county fire department unilo;
responded to the 4:19 p.m. blaze, two
from Laguna Hills and two from El Toro.
'Opry' Founder Dies
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UP!)-Edwln W.
Underground Progress Slow A few days prior to Goldberg's recom·
mendations, Mayor Glenn Vedder said
rJuly 8), "l think the whole council is
quite unhappy about the Chamber ot
Commerce disposal of the $35,000 last
yesr."
Craig, 76, one ot the founders ol the
Grand Ole Opry and nationally promintnt
in the insurance industry, died late
Thursday night of a heart ailment:
Cout
Public Utility Lines Still in Sight at Art Colony
By TOM GORMAN
' ~f ll'HI Dtltr-1'11111 $!•ff
Laguna · Beach P.lanning Commissioner
Joseph Tomehak recently suggested that
at the current rate or progress. il might
take 200 years to get all public utility
lines underground in the Art Colony.
TOmchak might have made the state-
ment with a bit of tongue in cheek, yet
the facts suggest his estimate might not
be too far otf.
Lquna Mayor Glenn Ve d d e r
acknowledges that cash available lo
remove ugly overhead wlm is "°meager
that the job can't be accelerated unless
citiiens take action by forming im-
pN}Vt'l1ltnt districts:.
llill>t now, Southern caurornla Editoo
Company is spending $6.5 million a year
lo get its electrical system underground.
This .·figures ou( to be a · spending
allowance 9f $2.881pcr Edison custom.er.
So< i:apoa llCidJ, baa IJ«\I allooli/><f
m,om annua1Jy1 ror ~underground 'lJtilit~·
projects.
Yet to put the unde:rcround cash In con·
' '
text, consider the job or undergrounding
only J,000 feet or power lines in front or
the new Civic Center in Fountain Valley.
.. That short-distance job cost $56,000.
And in order to accomplish that
relatively small task, Edison had to ac-
cumulale four years or allotments for
that city, for the initial, year in 1967
through 1970.
Undergrounding bas to bo done hand In
hand with both Edison and t h e
telephone companies. But G e n e r a J
Telephone hasn'l been told to spend &
ceN,l.n allotment or fund s for un-
derground1ng: they must go foot-for.foot
with Edison, whatever the coot.
Due to the type and number of wires
the telephone companies deal with,
though, their costs run I~ than Edison.
While Laguna bas never initiated any
sizeable 1Jndergrounding projects, Jn!., the 1 .past, a small one is in the making at the
present Unie. ... •
(. roit)';' CQluV:ilroen~~TH1t·. fliP~Vcd a t
pmjeel U..i'.•would place Undtt4"'1'nll '
utilities along •n aUe7 from the comer of 11.ermal~ and Glenoeyre lo lliO leel·IOU!h . '
\ •f".A.· ....... ~ \I . ' . ,.
-~-L
of Laguna Avenue.
The total distance is about 900 feet.
The Edi5on Company has '66,000 -three
yeart' allotments ror J..1guna -with
which to 'Work.
"We can be downlown for a long, long
time at that rate," said City Engineer
Joseph Sweany.
General Telephone will aJso be involved
in the project, foot-for.foot.
The p.roject amounts lo a token
gesture. Bu& it's a start, and it took three
years of allotments for the first atep.
Actual COii wlll be detirmined by
Edison engineers within 30 days.
City Planners have also passed a
re10luUon directing the plannlna: deparl·
ment to conduct an Jn-depth study, to find
out how to speed up removal or the
eyescores.
' Tiimdlat; Jn clJllmihg'·th~t-olh<r-cltleo
are acceleratina at a'fut.U rate., hopes to
find. 9ul her#· muah. rponey •Is ·beirlf,spent
tn , o£ber 'ciUt1, 1and.Jt the1.&pporUOnrncnt la <q\JltUlc. ' ' . , .,
Accordlnl to Edison'• JJal>rcs pl, 11lll
per customer, it is. · · ·
---r-••f .. .,..i .• ~j ~:· ....... ~ ..
\ .... ',1?1"'" '· ''\ t , ' I ~ ·'" ~ ..
..___,_.~ .~ . ~-
'
On the basi11 of $35,000, Goldberg said
the committee wouk! have the ta sk of
decided how much of $22,000 would be
spent on direct advertising and pro-
motion. The remaining $12,800 last year
was marked for salaries and office costs.
Wheaton said both ·categories are up
this year' In the proposal but said be has
not really studied the Items yet. He said
the chamber attributes the sales and bed
tax growth to it!: promotion program.
Wheaton said he expected the matter
would be studied -along with the rest of
the budget at a July 9 study seuiod ind
possibly the entJre budget would be up for
adoption July 16.
Hodges Escapes Fire
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. <AP> -Luther
Ji. Hodaes. 70, Cormer North Carolina
governor and U.S. lttttlar)' of com-
merte rrom. l98J. to ,l965, broke • leg
.when he JumJ>e<!.from the-$lory of
his 'hoine as il was swept by fin"Thurs-
,day •night, ' ' , " ' I ' '
He also' suffered smoke Inhalation but
was,fepart.ed ln aalisfactory:coodilion iii
a hospital.
-· -'~ ··-• "
-.
Weather
The mornings wlll be nothing to
write home about, buL· the week·
end a!temoons will be pretty nice,
with sunshine and temperature.s in
the low 70's along the coast.
INSIDE TODAY
Apollo Commander Ntil Arm-
strong "puUtd rortk" to be fir3t
man on tflt moon, sa11s former
Nt\SA "voice" Paul Ha11e11. Set
storil Page 1.
• • '
·-• ••
••
•
• J . f DAllY PllOT L -(".ljll, l'I, 1"'9
~ ~~J''l~Yr.-~. Yf.!. ~-' ~on~~ p~s
ie 1ci.,.efa :Jlias~n E~gias Sin~er ~s~·t . -.. ; ~ !In YORlt (11PJ) _ Actor 'J-0 .......... diwll .. and~~ o .ga .
·-"-M•aon~logi.led-Jud~arla.nd-today··• · ,a.~q.111=--••' ~ ... -r .4,.
.J ; *'the funniest girl in the world" who gave ,.lldlJ. · \:. . , .., ., s ·. \ ~:
11 ... _mou '° her audiences and friends than More than ao,eoo Garland fans passed.ax ·nill " oho 1ecellled llf return. (Earll!£ slo!1', her bier at au Wt al<le !opera! chapel Pip~~'.~....-..' ,. during the tylnf·ln-staie 'Mlursday and·
Tbe tiJlolYrreleued ID bout before the throuah !be early houn of today. Her
4. funeral of the 47-year~ld 6inger-actress, hwband, Mickey Deans, ordemt the body
" praised ~fiss Garland as "a person wllo to remain, on view continuously until
· <"': gave richly both to her vast audience and preparationl for the 1 p.m. fuoeraJ began
. .' her l)'jeads, .but qeeded to be. repaid.'' 1111 a.'111. • • . ~1: Hlr-areatest lift. be uid, wu I.he ablllty Slx mourners were ln 11lne when the
» "Ip 1!Jic oo lhal It would break yOllf chapel doorJ were cloeed and they ""'
:!oo. heart..,. . • klmed away, diaappolnted. ... . "
"' ::'.Nixon Flies to Canada ..
·:~For Seaway Anniversary
~JASSl!NA, N.Y. (UPI) -President ..,.. . . .
.. N~n .. Jolned Canad11n Prime MJnlster
... Pierre Elllott Trudeau at the border t~
day •lo commemorate the lOt.h an-
niversary of the·St. Lawrence Seaway. ·
The. two heids or elate met at the
monument to international friendship on
· • ,· t.he. Robert fi.toses-Robert 11. Saunders
;: · Power Dam . One le& of the compasa
• shaped monument iJ in the Uni1*1 States
·~-·and the other in Canada.·
i!I~ After meet.ing at the monument, Nixon ., .
••. ;. ' and, Trudeali got into a aedan and drove
i , . : ·to tbe. Dwight D. Eisenhower lock.
~'.!< Tbouaands were on hand to greet Nixon
., :·and waving Canadian and American
~ .'~ flags.
•1 The Pre&ldent flew by presidential ~ bellcopter for his meeUng with Trudeau
,.., after landing In Air Force One at the
Plattsburgh, N. Y. AFB.
The two free world leaders greeted
·. each other at the site where Queen
Ellzabeth and President Eisenhower
,. ·1 dedicated .a portion of the seaway 10 --)'ears ago.
After ceremonial speeches rededicating
the Dwight D. Eisenhower lock, Ni:J:on
and Trudeau 'new to Montreal for a tour
.. ,. of "¥11.n and Kia World," an international
::,:·· 1 expoJ!Uon ~ the ~te of E1po '67 on De
_. Saint-Helene. ~.. Canadian official& blocked It <lff for the
" day because <lf possible demonstraUo~.
. ..
.>A.' ...,,
-.:; ... •
Aliso Pier Site
Nixon 1a!t sa:w Trudeau when the
prime minister visited WashJngton March
24 and 25. He was the first world leader
to meet wilh Ule new President in
Washington.
:s~n · Joaqu~
Tr11stees Okay
Schools' Budget
San Joaquin Elemenlary S c h o o I
District trustees Thursday approved a
te.ntaUve 196$-70 schools budget of about
$4,975,000.
The sprawling district of 10 &Chools
serves the Saddleback Valley area in·
clud.inc Irvine, El Toro, and Misalon Vie·
jo.
Bwilness superintendent Rex Nerlson
said Ute budget could increase the
general purpose tax rate 34 cents trom
IJ.35 to perhaps 11.69 per 1100 assesaed
valuation.
~e spending 6Chtdule calls for the ex·
pendlture of about $642 per student. Of.
ficials predict an average dally at·
tendanee of about 7,500 studenll through
the school year. The fina1 budget will be adopted In Ali&ust.
WASHINQTON iUfl) -The House
gave flnal congressional approval today
to st.opgap legislation to c;ontinuc througb
July payroll wlthhol~ng for lhe 10 ptJ'·
cent income tu surcharge that expires
at midnight Monday. (Earlier story, page
7J.
Both Democratic and Republican
leaders predicted tbe House would ap-
prove President NiJon'11 tax package -
containing an exlenalon of pie tax itself
-on Monday.
The tax bill, as recommended by the
\Vays and Means Committee aL Nixon's
request, would continue the surtax at its
10 percent rate for six more months,
through. 1969, and at a five percent rate
for the first six monthl of uno.
Today's bill wu necessary, most mem·
bcrs agreed, to avoid chaos in pri vate
and governmental pay , offices whicll
otherwise would have been forced to
recompute pay checks and recalculate
withholding totals for transmission to the
Treasury Department.
Even most opponenlJ of the surtax
extension joined In urging passage of tile
emergency measure, whicll bad been ap-
proved by tile Senate Wednesday.
They pointed out that today·s bill does
not affect the ultimate liability of the tax·
payer.
In the end, tllere was ao little objection
the bill was passed by voice vote.
Leaders sougllt to nail down the votes
on which lhey were counting to pew the
tax extension bih Monday. Bo th
Democrats and Republican managers of
the bill were confident it would pass.
The bill originally had been set for a
House vote Wednesday. It was delayed at
the last minute when a nose count failed
to produce a majority for it.
RepubUcans subsequently solidified
their ran ks behind the measure and
Democratic leaders felt they had counted
eoougll additional Democratic votes to
put It across, so the vote was reset for
Monday.
OA.U.Y P'ILOT Sltlf l'Mlt
Dra\Ving on photo indicates approxlmate location of pier from nearby property owners. Pier will extend
future Aliso Pier. County supervi~I re.affirmed about 500 feet out to sea from present parking berm
:support for project this week despite objections to and will cost about $600,000. . ~-'--~~~~~~~~-'---'--~~~~~~
• .,
• ' -··
DAlll PILOT ·
~AHO~ COloll f'VlljllUNo'. CcMH,l('f
l•\.trt N, W•eil
PmNilllt _, Putllltlv
J•,\: a. C11•ltY Vkt Pru-r ...o Gultrlll Mlfll!ltf
' ,......, lC•••il
. Sinking Sailboat Signal s
For .Help; Eight Ahoa1·d
.,, ,,
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"
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lbo111•1 A. M11111ki~•
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~i<:.htrd '· Nill L .. VN INa
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2ZZ F111•t A••· Porn., M.~11111 ,..0, h1 t 66, 'JUl --'•" MeH: DI l#tol .. ., S'>wl .....,,..,, ....,., 1711 #al """" ... ...,.,.. ,.... ...... ; ., 61h Mr-.t
-.lei •
-------------· --
Cutters and aircraft were racing to find
a &ailboat sinking &omewhere off the
Orange Coa!t today with ei1ht persons
and only a six-man liferaft aboard, fol· lowing a 7:40 a.m. disaster broadcast.
No one aboard the vessel 1denUfied <lnly
111 the Valkyrie knew her exact position
except IM)11lewhere soulh of the Channel
Isl ands, offerinc a vast search aru.
Spokesmen for the lllh Coast Guard
District's Search and Rescue ctnter in
Long Beach said no furtller news had
been received shortly before noon.
"We're just not sure where she ill," he
added .
A rad I o broadcast monitored in
~1onterey at 7:40 a.m. aaid the Valkyr ie
had eight person.!I aboard, but neither
tney nor the ship'• home port were. iden-
tified in the Mayday distress call.
<:out Guardsmen in Long Beach said
the Uth Co1tt. Guud District was main·
lalntng juriadlctlon of the it.a search, but
the Southland unit waa expected to take
over tiy noon.
Today'a broadcast said the Valkyrie
"'' almost foundering with water in the engine compartment clear to the deck
plates and a pump would be required to
keep her afloat.
l
Despite . the fact she carried two
persons more than her lifebo.al is design·
ed lo hold , spokesmen said, the Valkyrie
repartedly c a r r i e d ll fejackets for
everyone.
She also carried a supply of 22
emergency flares in case tbe search
should carry through into dar .. -ness W.
night, depending on the Valkyrie's uncer·
taln position.
Coast Guard spokeamen said the
sailboat left San FranciliCo June 25 en
route lo Santa Barbara, but It was not
determined whether she put in£o the c:en·
tr al Callfomla harbor or ptsaed il by.
Two 9f>.foot patrol cutters, a re!Cut
helicopter and a flxed·win1 aircraft were
dispai.ched from the Coast Guard base In
Ule Pon ot Loi Angeles to assist In the
Starch.
Cos1nos 288 Launched
MOSCOW (UPl) -The Soviet Union
today launched an unma nned satellite in·
to an almost identical orbit with another
6ent up three daya aro.
Ta!! said Cosmos 288 was launched to
"continue cx-ploration ol out.er space.''
\
OA.U.'I" P'M.OT St11f Pllllt
Tougli Choice Ahead
\ViU1 annual July ( Lifeguard Beauty Contest fas t
a pproaching, Sleepy Hollow liieguard Steve Foster,
22, \vill soon have to choose his beach's repre~ent.a~
tive. He appears to have narro"'·ed choice down to
three hopefuls. From left are Sue Davis, 19, Candi
Mccue, 18 (on his lap), and Robin Springe, 16.
Building Bids
On Fire Stations
In Canyo11 Set
New bids for construction or tile
t.1lssion Viejo and Modjeska Canyon fire
stations will be accepted in August, the
Board of Supervisors decided Tuesday
after a one·week delay.
Supervisor Alton E. Allen who asked
fc · the delay, mo\•ed re jection of all
previous bids after hearing proposals by
Building Services Director Joseph J,
Smisek for a revision of specifications lo
bring the cost of cacll facility below
!100,000.
Bids on the. f.1isslon Viejo station rang·
ed from $125,500 to $139,058, compared
with an esUmated cost of $85,307. On thr.
Moctjeska station bids ran from $125,510
to $130 ,973, wilh estimated cost at $84,351.
After conferring lvilh Architect \Villard
T. Jordan o[ Costa Mesa, Smisek recon1-
mended that the Mission Viejo station be
changed from concrete block to wood and
stucco cons1ruetlon to save at least $6,000
and that otller items be eliminated in
order to save $3,000.
J·le said that conferences witll pro-
spe<:tlve bidders indicated new bids
should be under $100,000.
County Fire Warden Elmer Osterman
objected to any delay citing several ex·
amples In which delays actually led tJ
higher costs on today's market. He
pointed out that the site had been donated
by ' the Mission Viejo Co. reducing Lhe
cost by some $25,000 to S30,000.
On the Modjeska slallon , Smisek said it
would be redesigned to allow use of pre·
fab materials.
Black Magic Plea Fails
LONDON (UPI) -A Nigerian mother
v;as sentenceq lo tllree months in jail
Thursday for beating her son with ru1
electric cord because she thought he \ves
~ under a black magic spell that kept him
small. The woman had pleaded Innocent.
Good Samaritan Picks
Vp Hitchhiking Thief
A good samaritan wllo picked up a
hitchhiker for deposit In Laguna Beach
Thursday found her purse $19 tighter.
Police said that Peggy Porroe, 17,
Sw·fin g Tourney
Forms Available
Entry blanks are available for the 15th
Annual Laguna Beac h Surfing Touma·
ment. to be staged at Brooks Street
Beach J.u!Y 12. .
The contest. open to Laguna Beach
surfers only, includes six events. They
are senior and junior (17 and under) melli
surfing. senlor and junior men board rac·
ing, body surfing and skid board (ages 12·
and under).
Entry blanks are avallable at city llall
and the Oak Street guard tower. Entries
must be turned in with a $1 fee by July 10
at city hall.
J(cunedy Hit on Note
To ll'ish Association
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -
The Nort hern Ireland government critl·
cized Sen. Edward a-1, Kennedy (D·
l\1ass.), today {or cabling his support lo
the Ulster Civil Rigllts Association, whicll
has been at the center of recent wide·
spread political strife.
Prime l\linistc r James Chichester·Clark
sa'id in a statement : "l do not think it
desirable for legislators in one country
lo involve themsel ves in the internal af·
fairs of another."
Fullerton discovered the money missing
after Jetting out the male hlker in tbl
600 block or Soutll Coast Higllway.
Botll the purse and the long·llaired
hitchhiker were in the back seat, she
said.
In another theft report, Jack W. Raw·
lins, 1008 S. Coast Highway, told police
tbat ll\'O lO·speed racing bikes and a
love seat with hand-carved legs had been
stolen from the unlocked garage. The
loss was $180.
Kathy Ann Tatum, 18, 605-A Griffith
\Vay, reported the theft of a purse with
$19 and identification from an unlocked
car in the 400 block or Cress Street.
A garage burglary attempt at che
home o! ~arlene 8. Phillips, 990 Mea·
doWlark Drive, had failed because of
an electric lock. The would·be burglar
llad cut a hole in tile door near the lock.
Frona Page 1
COACHES ..•
concerned, coaches were told that ap-
pl.lcants for the.tr jobs were walling in the
wings.
Dr. Wiiiiam Ullom, district superin·
lendent, sa.id today that two teacher
vacancies now exist in the field of social
science.
"Tile people that will be employed will
have coaching skills," he said . Other
coaching positions may be filled by
present staff 1nembers, he said.
Coaches involved are: Norm a n
Borucki, ba!eball coach ; lightweight foot·
ball and basketball coaches Warren
\\'atkins and Jerry Neumann; Jack
Lythgoe. varsity track coach and Ed
Bo~·en, assistant varsity football coach.
Summer Safe
STARTS TUESDAY, JULY ht
Ou r Annuol Sole will feature many fomous groups, from
such lines es DREXEL, HENREDON, HERITAGE. Also t o be
incl.uded in the sole ore !'II of the upholstery items in stock,
plus speciol order upholstery mer chon di se ot substantial
savings. Acc0 uories, lomps ond pictures will be reduced.
Don't hesitate ~ •. come in and make your selections now.
You will be pl eoso nlly surpris ed ot the I o r g e variety of
quolily furniture on display now ol reol so vin gs, .
Drexel's sale merchandise will be reduced starling Mondoy.
J un e 30th.
WI All SOil'( JOl '"' JNCOJrCVINllNCI uu11• IY THI COMITlUCflON WCI•• ON wnTCLIJlf IDllYl. THiii II
IAIY ACCUS" PAa•1N• AT THI ..... o• OUll STOlL
NEWPORT BIACH
1727 W•tcllff Dr., 642-lOSO
Ol'IM NIDAY "flL t
Proftuionil lnl1rior
O•lgners
Av1lt•ble-AID-HSID
LAGUNA IEACH
145 Nonh C011t Hwy. 4'44551
ONM NIDAY "m t
ri...t Tell .... W• fll °'9p C...., Mf.IJilJ
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40 , To,.. of Aid
Cargo Planes
-------····--------·--
Help Ben Het
SAIGON (UPI) -ild>lnd a amoka
1Creeo laid down by flpter-bombers,
U.S. cargo plane11 swept over the belie&·
eel Green Beret camp at Ben Het for the
first day in three today and dropped 40
tons ol supplies to the 650-man allied bls-
Uon.
A top U.S. Special Forces commander
In nearby Kontum said the approximately
2.000 North Vietnamese surroW>din& Ben
Hel for the past 51 days bad ac·
complished "nothing, nothing:, nothing"
and called the siege a stupid move.
There was no letup in the Communist
bombardment of the camp. At least 75
artillery, mortar and rocket rounds slam·
lsl'aeli, Arab
Troops Clash
On Truce Line
By United Preas JnttrnatiooaJ
Israeli forces today battled Egyptian
and Jordanian troops across the t.1iddle
East cease-fire lines. Diplomatic sources
disclosed today lhat Israeli jets flew
unchaJlenged over Cairo last \\'eek even
though the early radar warning system
flashed an alarm.
An Egyptian military spokesman In
Cairo reported that Israeli gunners shell·
ed Egyptian civilian targets in the
Adabiya area, about 13 miles south of
Suez City, early today . He said Egyptian
artillery replied and knocked oot the
l sraeli gun sites in a 2~z hour battle. No
Egyptian casualties were reported,
An Israeli military spokesman reported
. earlier in Tel Aviv that Egyptian and
Israeli forces dug in on the western and
eastern banks of the canal fought another
jn their almost-nightly gun duels during
·the night.
A 10.minute machine gun duel acros:!I
the Jordan River cease-fire line between
lsrae\is and Jordanians this afternoon
was reported by a Jordanian spokesman
in Amman . He said there were no Jorda·
nian casualties in the exchange about
three miles sooth of the Sea of Galilee
but that two Jordanian soldien were
wounded in a 36-m.inute tank and machine
gun battle in the same area on Thursday.
Reports reaching London from Cairo
said four Israeli jet fighters flew over
Cairo on a reconnas.siance mission on
June 17 for between si1 to eight minutes
even though they were spotted on radar
1creens v.·hen they intrudtd into Egypt'•
air space. No antiaircraft guns went into
action and Egyptian MIG jet fighters
were scrambled too late to catch the
Israeli invaders. the reports said.
The reports said that as a result of the
incident, the two top Egyptian air force
commanders were fired , a complete
overhaul of the air warning defense
system ordered and "Officers responsible
· for the failure to take military action
against the Israelis court-rr,artialed.
A spokesman in T.:I Aviv said two
Israeli soldiers were wounded in the
artillery exchanges during the night. He
made no mention of damages.
A few hours earlier, Israeli Defense
Minister Moshe Dayan had warned the
Arab states he ·would mobilize the na·
tion's reserve forces if fighting continued
to escalate along the cease-fire lines.
\Varning that Arab commandos are in·
creasing their influence on A r a b
governments, and criticizing the current
big four talks on a peace plan as en·
couraging Arab intransigence, Dayan
1aid he expects new tensions along the
truce lines imposed after the 1967 war.
med lnto the post. Five men suffered
wounds ln a LZ7-round barrage Thursday.
A brea:C in the monsoon weather now
blanketinc the central highlands opened
the way for, the twin-engine Caribou
cargo planes whose crews dump bundles
ol supplies by parachute out the bt!ck
door during low-level runs over the out·
post.
Propeller-drivtn AIE Skyrakler righter·
bombers led the Caribous in, dropplni::
smoke bombs and firing smoke rockets
that cast a pall of while amoke over lhe
camp and obscured the bigger cargo
planes from Communist ground ;unners.
The packiges of food, water and am-
munition fluttered around Ben He t but
lhe allied troops stayed in their t:unkers,
prtfering to recover the packages after
dark when spotters for the Communist
guns cannot sec lhem.
The.re had been no shortage at the
camp, for two convoys fought their y,·ay
lhrousl-from Oak To. eight miles lo t!1e
cast, fifonday• and Tuesday when the
wealher closed in. They brought enou;;::h
food and ammunihon to keep the
defenders in stock.
No ground fighting "'as reported
around the outpost but U.S. headquarters
in Saigon reported two Comm'Jnist
ground attacks early today against h\·o
other, widely separated American base:>.
In one of the ground attacks, troops uf
th'.! U.S. 5th Mechanized Infantry Division
killed I J Communists trying to storm
their base southwest of the abandoned
b; stion at Khe Sanh. No An1ericans were
killed.
Jn the second. U.S. 25th Division
soldiers northwest of Saigon lost seven
men wounded in drivi ng off North Viet·
namese attackers who lert behind 28
bodies from helicopter gunship strikes.
John \VayneCalls
Critic Rosenthal
Publicity Seeker
Actor John Wayne of Newport Beach
Tlnusday called Rep. 8 e n J a m j n
Rosenthal fD-N .Y.), a "publicily seeker"
and said the Pentagon v.·as "more than
careful" in billing him during production
of "The Green Berets."
\Vayne said the $18,623.64 he wa!'i
charged was not a token payment but the
exa~~ amount it cost to use government
equipment that could not be obtained
elsewhere.
The actor said his Batjac Productions
Inc. also spent $171 ,000 to bui ld a camp
c.n the base used by the Army alter the
fiLJ:ning was finished. The con•pany ;ilso
paid $305.000 for extras for 70 days of
shooting, 80 percent of "'hich went lo off·
dut y army personnel and their depen·
dants, \Vayne said.
''I think th is publicity seeker had helter
check his figures and know \\'hat he·s
talking about." Wayne said . "Here he 's
belittliog one of the only films I know
about that's expressly been mak ing
Americans appear heroes around the
~·orld."
Rosenthal has criticized the Pentagon
for permitting Wayne to use facillties al
Ft. Benning, Ga. for the contrO\'Crsial
film .
L~t"less
Suspect
Arraigned
LlsUcss and epparently uncaring,
George A. Vick appeared in Santa Ana
MunJclJ>ll court today for arraignment on
charges that he murdered a former
Orange Coast CoUege coed in her Tustin
apartment.
Judge Leonard McBride continued ar·
raignment until fifonday but not until he
had atruggled to convince Vick, 29, nf
15491 Pasadena Ave. that he must ha ve
the services of an attorney.
Vick told the judge that he didn't want
legal representation be it through a
privately hired law yer or the public
defender . \
''There ma y be defenses or iss ues that
you as a lay person cannot sec," Judge
McBride admonished him. "You should
be represented on such a charge."
Vick shrugged his shoulders, look ed iL
the judge and flatly C<Jmmented: "It's
cl-One."
Judge fiicBride appointed the public
defender.
Vick is accused of the slaying Wcri
nesday of Susan C. Adams. 20, whose
body was found by police 13t the Tustin
apartment.
Officers sa id she had been battered on
the head \\'ilh a heavy in strument 3nd
then suffocated, possibly by a pillow.
Vick was arrested after he aUegedly at·
tempted to commit suicide by running a
hose from lhe exhaust pipe in!o his stolen
car. Vick \\'as bookc<l on suspicion llf
murder. Offictrs said he was also !he
subject of an Oregon warrant charging
him with auto theft.
County Airport's
Air Mu seum Open
Again Saturday
The Movieland of the Air fi1u:ieum will
reopen at Orange County Airport Satur-
day at IO a.m. after extensive remodel· ing.
The mu sewn will feature 40 eldlibits
s.nd aircraft from motion pictures aOO
television .
F'rank Tallman , president of Tallma nh:
AviaUon Tnc .• stated that there will be
construction sets aud mockups used from
molion picture filming .
Another feature of the new air museum
1vill be film strips depicting the planes
floW'!l by Tallmantz stunt pilots in movie., ..
Each weekend the musl'!un1 will fly
the actuid pl~~es shown on film strips
for all the v1s1~ors to see. Jn addition,
the museum win fealure barnstorming
ri.des in historic airplanes at the nearby airport.
Tallman noted that "phOlo bugs will
again be able to photograph some of the
world's truly historic airplanes in their
pr oper setting."
County Journalis111
Grad lo Be Cited
Paul Altner of Westminster, Cal State
Fullerton journalism graduate, is one of
67 students nationv.•ide to receive a cita·
tio~ of ac~ieven:ient from Sigma Delta
Chi professional Journalism society.
Attner, of 15912 La va Way tn
\Veslminsler. has taken a job v.·i1h the
\Vashington Post.
Snsa11 Loses Fight for Life
County's First Kwney Transpwnt Patient Dies
Susan Mazze is dead.
The 17-year-old Santa Ana girl who
thanJi:fully accepted being Orange Coun·
ty's first lddney transplant patient klst
the long and courageous battle for the
normal life she never had at 3:55 p.m.
Thursday.
Nurses who had found it difficult to
maintain their CQmposure through the
last hours of the doomed h.igh 1chool girl
finally found it impossible to contain their
grief.
JI took one bitterly sobbing member of
the Jntenslve care unit mJre than 15
minutes Thursday night to tell a
new5man that the plucky girl who had
battled mounting complicatloni; for the
past two weeks "is 11-0 longer with us.
"She's the bravest patient I've known
in more than 20 years on the wards," the
nurse sald. ''There was never a com-
plaint. never anythln' othtt than a amile
and a detp faith and conviction that abe
w1s going to get well."
But it was obvious lo everyone in these
last few days that SUsan WU in the. fjnaJ
throes of a struggl' that really began
with tier birth 17 years ago.
She and the team of surgeons who
brought ~ succeasfully throuih her uni-
que oper;Uon were finding it mort and
more dlffJcult to withstand lhe ravages of
post..oper1Uve comp11caUoos. Not the
least of thou compltcationa 'lfa• the rag·
inc pneumonia which finally defied lhe
tlfort.s of her physicians.
With Susan 1t the end was Leonard
?tlaue. the f11ther 'vho poured his life
~llvlnp •nd all the money be could lay
LONG BATTLE ENDS
Sunn M•u•
his hand' Ol"I to clve hi' daughter her 10th
and final operation.
Unable to be with lier was f'lorence
lilme, the de voted mother who ls no w
recuperating from her half of the
~splant surgery -an operation 1n wh1~ she donated half of her kidney
function le. he~ desperately ill daughter.
. Th~t o~at1on proved tragically to be !" vain. Hailed as .a complete success in
its nrst hours, the new kidney had to be
abandoned with the onset of com·
plications and Susan went back to lhe
artificial kidney machine , th at sustained
her faltering life in the n1onths before surgery.
Messages of sympathy were pouring in
to the Mazze home in Santa Ana toda y.
Many of them came from show business
a~rs "h? put on a special benefit for the
ail ing girl at the Anaheim Convention
Center three months ago.
~nd .. there were, a family spokesman
said, many many messages from people
who never met Susan but who close ly
followed her fifht for We through the
newspapers day by day.
"Susan had a lot of friends," the
spokcsm&n said. "She knew thal and she
was vt:ry grateful for everything that was
ever done for her. She believed right at
the end that everything wu going to be
just fine and •he died believing that."
Funeral serviCftl h1•e been schedultd
for noon Sunday at Temple Beth Shalom
in Santa Ana. Burial will follow at Mount
Olive Cemetery in Costa Mesa.
Susan·a parents today asked that the
Santa Ana services be limited to the
family and friends. The burl•I. however,
wiTI he open to the publlc.
Ffnal tributes have been :;11g~e~l ed in
form of donaUons to the City or !lope.
f:'ricf.ly, JUM 27, 1969 DAIL V l'ltOT "
Alioto: Some Protests
Should Be Encouraged
By TOM BARLEY
Of I~• Del,., l'lltl Sti lt
Dissent on California's campuses
should be encouraged and not suppressed
provided lhat student objections are vole·
ed wllttin a formula that is clearly ac-
ceptable to the vast majority of them.
Sa:1 Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto said
Thursda y in Anaheim .
"Our students demand and deserve to
have a share In decisions that can mean
the shaping or their lives and the nature
of th~ir fut~re role in our society," !lie
volatile civic leader told his Town Hall
audience.
"They are intense, involved, tremen·
dously dedicateU and afire with lhr
refonnlng zeal thal we, with 11ur
dete~ina~ion to provide the highest
education tn the world, have injected int.:i
them ," he said.
"But let 's not knock it," urged the man
who is, in ; II but announcement, Gov.
Ronald Reagan 's opponent in the 1970
gubernatorial election. "Let's encourage
it provided tha t we get home to them -
and, believe me, H's a truth they
ackno y,·Jedge -lhe fa ct that those pro-
tests must be contained within the limits
of a Constitution that is the n1ost revolu·
Uonary thing of its kind in the world."
'FAJR HEAIUNG'
Alioto held up the quelling of dissent at
San Francisco State College as ·•a prime
example of y,·hal can be achieved -¥itb
the acli\'ation of mediating machine ry
that is geared to a fair hearing or both
6ides of the dispute."
He lauded the San Francisco police ol·
ficers who moved in on lhe troubled Ray
City campus as "working within the very
fra1newo rk lhal I'm advocating today -
the unassailable lhcory that violenct
should only be put down with force jusl
sufficient lo Contain that violence."
Jr that kind of theory "and the will lo
really consider student demands thnt
were, by and alrgc. nwre l h a n
reasonable" had been applied a t
Berkeley, Alioto said, "there v.·ould have
been no need for "bayonets, buckshot and
aerial gas attack."
Students want and should have a say in
matters of curriculum , admin istration
planning and enforcement of rules, Aliot~
said . "They v.·iil not be brushed orr." he.
warned, "and it'8 about lime that we
recognized this and invited and welcon1ed
thei r participation in the conduct of our
school systems."
But that recognitio n of i;tudents' rights
OAILY l'ILOT $1111 'IMM
CRITICIZES GOVERNOR
San Fr•nci•co's Alioto
must include the students' recognition
that their dissent must only be within the
bounds of established law and order, Alioto added.
!\OT RADICALS'
'"Our children are not communists,"
the mayor said. ;,Whatever we hear and
read, they are not the rabid radica ls that
many of us fear they have become. rr
1nany of you had talked to them as I have
you would find, as 1 did, that th ey are
young people desperate ly trying to
achieve recognition and a voice Jn cam.
pus affairs and more than willing to do it
within the bounds of law and ord er.
"And most of those young people have
the highest respect for the Consllluti on
we're always throwing al them," Alioto
added. "They are oot being led by Che
(Guevara of Cuba) or Peking in
allegiance to a doctrine that is as loreign
to them as ii is to us."
Alioto urged adop tion of "programs '.n·
vo\ving the use of professional law en·
foreers, oUicer• especially skilled ln their
control of campus dlsturbanct.!I. "These
men," he aaid, "woukt snk out the Blick
Panthtrs, SOS leaders, dope puabert,
cons and hoodlums who are at tbe heart
of many of the disturbances.
"This should and must be done " he
said. "But we must not blame tp
1lrtted
youngsters, afire with a zeal that must be
slrangely familiar to us, fer taking us off
our warm and ~ seats and maldrt1 QI
lhink a little longer and deeper than wt
have been accustomed to doing."
'ILL ADVISED'
"Let us pick out -and, I can as.sure
you, they are pretty easy to pick out -
these hard liners and put them behind
~ars where they belong," Alioto said.
And let me tell you this a• a result of
my o~n experience in working for 1
resolution of the San Francisco Stat•
disorders -hard liners rally support
al~ost in direct ratio to the force with
which r basic s~udent aspirations are
repr~sed or suppressed."
Alioto made no direct reference to Gov.
Reagan In hls formal Town Hall &JW!eeh
but he earlier condemned the govemOr•s
~c.tions at Berkeley as "Ill advised and
tnflammatory."
He particularly castigated Reap.n's
defense of the use of a helicopter wblcb
sprared gas over much of the t1mpwi
and into the surrounding conununJty and
hospital. ''That action and hi.! seeminc
endorsement of it did a lot or damqe io
community-student relations," he aaid.
''The revolution that confronts us todly !:: no! a campus revolution," he said ... It
·~ a social revolution born of the exclt.in&
times we live in and a prefa ce lo our
recognition of the right of youna peoplo lo
have a voice In our nation ': affairs.'
Stanton Company
Wi11s Contract
A Stanton construction company Thura·
day was awarded a $261,670 low bid con·
tract for const ruction of a 1.6-mile widen-
ins project along Beach Boulevard la
north Orange County. '
Coxco Associates Inc., 7002 Katella
A'·e., was assigned the job of increasing
Highway 39 to four lanes between
Anaheim anri Buena Park.
The State Division of Highways award-
ed another $93,694 contract for a Ventura
County job Thursday in Lo.s An&eles.
~your •
•
DO DOE
$50,000~000*
CLEIRllCE
SILE
HARBOR DODGE
2181 HARIOR Bl VD.
COSTA MESA-540·IUI
/,
... Are you
a Charger?
yourdlaaceto nabatfidl!
Prices •re aleahed on every 1989 Dodge C.r
•nd Truck. Tradea ere up ••. term• ire your1
to make. Even demonstn1tors Ind exlCUtlve
model• ara on the block. So girt your •hire
of the 111Vlng1 tod1y ... whlle fh-v lut.
BEACH CITY DODGE
16555 BEACH BLVD. (Hwr: lt)
HUlfTINGTOlf BEACH -U7-t63f
•
" ·• • DAILY • .fUT-•
Police said tbey captured a bur·
111aJY 1urpect red-handed -and
!imi-bott«ned -out.Ide a liquor
alonl In Chicago. An IS.year.old
wu cbllried with burglary after
pol.ice watched him slide down an
Ice chute in front of the at.ore com·
pl..., naked. Authorities said tbe
youngster told police ho removed
bla clolhes to climb through tbe Ice
chute Into tbe liquor otore on tbe
Soulhwlllt Side to 1et ice for a pie·
nlc.
Now that .summer's htre 5-t1ear·old
Ja.n4 FairalTVice hGB lots of time to
bloao bubb~1. But it looka like 1he
ftll'da' sonu: practice si11ce her bub-
bles neither float nor pop, but 1im-
ply l!lck .. th• pl ...
The East st. Louis, JU , City
<:.ouncil rave in to pleas by city
jaU pri1011ero for •oul food. The
prilOllera, mostly Negro<s, will
ltart getting ham hocks and black·
eyed pea• and such under a con·
tract awarded to Mary's KJtchen , a
Negro.owned restaurant. A11t. Po-
llco Chio! J, Codoll Molloy support·
ed. the change, saying the previous
caterer was "not providing the
aervlce or the quality or quantity
of food necessary to illlure some
peace and harmony in the jail." •
Vickie orrit1tl bt1 chcuffered
car at Suzette'1 Groomette. once
a month. She 01ti the $8 special
including a ptdicure, a hai r ~
Uep-up with sptcial "ttarlt••H r
shampoo and. a coiffure. Vi ckit , 1 ts tht prtlldential poodle. Eve"ll ii
hair Ls aaved 1ohtn ahe Ottl her I'll
pomp o fn trimmed. Ctutomer1
and tn1mber1 of tht' 1taf/ keep
them 41 1ouvenir1. One wo-
man'• l/OtmOlttr reporttdlll
took a bagful to achool for "'rhow and tell,. time.
• Their marriage anthem : "Take
Me Out to The Ballgame." Two
buses. containing 70 members of a
i:burcb group pulled Into a road·
side park 80 two of its members,
Wilbur Page, 57, and Dorothea
Wllllom1, 36, could get married.
Both live in Bellevue. Mich. The
Rev. Wllliam Brown performed
the ceremony and all 70 friends
•igned the marriage certificate.
Then. the group conUnued the jour.
11ey to Detroil to see a baseball
1'3me. The lrtp had one unhappy
segment. The Tigers Jost.
frid1Y, Jll!lt %7, 1~
JHrkseta, A lfi A Wit~
Finch Gives In,
Drops Knowles
WASHINGTON !UPll -HEW
Secretary .)Robert ff. Finch today
lonnally d10pped hll .,...,..nth eflort to
hive Dr. John H. Knowles of Boston
named &o the federal government'• top
health post.
Finch said he deeply re,retted the
situation and tht fact that t.ba depart·
ment of health, tducaUon and wellare
will be deprived of the servittt or
Knowles whom be described 11 "this
outstanding leader in the field of health
care."
Finch referred to "protracted and
diltorted dbcussion" regardin1 the ap·
poinlment.
The K n ow I e s appointment. recom·
mended by Finch to President Nixon, had
become embroUed in a swirl of con·
trovt:rsy, with Senate Republican leader
Stores Guarde d
For Rocky Visit
BUENOS AIRES (UP!l -Police rem ·
forumenta today auarded the remal.nlng
stores in a Rockefeller-run supennarket
chain firebombed 1n protest to the im·
peodlng visit of New York Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller.
Guards were stationed at 350 other
American-owned !inns.
In a nallonwldt warning Thursday
nl&ht Interior 1'1lnl.!ter Francisco Imai
said the government would ''i:etp order
at any cost" when Rockefeller arrives.
Tiny incendiary b o m b s hidden in
tooebpaste boxes, tin cans and other
receptacles dtstroytd 1i1 of the 21
Minimai grocery stores in and around
Buenos Aries early Thursday, police 1aid.
She'• /lfb• Wool
Frankie Mitchell of Salem .
Va., bursts into tears and
laughter as she is named Mis s
Wool of America a t the 12th
annual pageant in San Angelo,
Tex.
Everett M. Dlrbeu and tbl American
Medlcal Aa:sodation leading the op.
position.
Koowlu had appeared almost certain or eetttna the nominaUon earlier in the
week, but the sltuaUoo changed during
behind-the-wi.nes maneuvering the put
lwo daya.
finch, in a statement issued by hia of-
fice at 8 a.m. POT alter congreasionaJ
sourcea reported Knowles bad betn
dwnptd, said he had informed the Boston
hospital administrator that the cm-
lroven;:y had created a aituation "ln
which he "'ould not be able to funcUon ef.
fectlvely,"
finch's statement, as a:iven t o
reporters (Finch did not appear):
''I have reluctantly and rtgrelfulty
decided and today advised Dr. John
Knowles that the protracted and distorted
discussion regarding his appoinbnent as
assistant aecretary has resulted in 1
situation in which he would not be able to
funcUon effecUvely in this crlUcal posi-
tion."
Allies, Saigon
Agree on 1 Thing:
Talks Deadloc ked
PARIS (UPI) -Allied and Communm
negotiators said today the Vietnam peaa
talk.! were completely deadlocked. Both
sides saki tht 2.1rd session of the negoUa·
Uons failed to make any progress.
Communist delegates raid time is run-
ning out for America in the war. ''Time
is definitely not on the side of Mr. Nix·
on," said a spokesman for the North
Vietnamese delegation.
The spokesman referred to atatementa
made recently by Preaident Nixon e1·
pressing hope of witbdrawin& more than
100,000 U.S. troops by the end of ntlt
year.
"Mr. Nixon is trying to crt1te false
hope to assu1ge the rising current of
public opin}on against him," the
a;pokesm1n said.
American delgaUon spokesman H•rold
Kaplan said the Communists had firmly
enlrt!nched thtmatlves in a po.tltion of
non-negotiation.
"We have spelled out in detail every
area in which the two sides might be able
to melte progress in peace negotiations -
prisoner of war t1changes, dl;eion of
the 1954 Geneva Accords, the llltaria-
ed zone -but unfortunate have
heard no expresaion ol lntuut from the
Communln side," be sald.
"They seem to require a total Com-
munist victory as a precondition for
negotiation, as U anything would then be
left to negotiate," Kaplan said.
Kaplan in Thursday's seasion said the
CommunlN "made it clear they are not
wJillU" to nea:oliate."
A Viet Cong delegate said one reason
for the lack of progress was the Allied re-
jection or Communist demands for • coalition government in Saigon.
The Viet Con& reiterated its demand
that the present Saigon administration be
oulted bafore any aarttments could be
made, claimlna: the support or the "'peo-
plt In the cltleo of South Vltlnam."
"We support the demands of the
populaUon of the cities of South Vietnam
when they demand the replacement of
the Thlai·}cy·Hoong puppet regime with
government by peace," said the spokes·
man.
1be Americans have made it clear they
are prepared to play the waiUng game.
"We are ready to 1tay htre until the
1~halrs are worn out," chlef American
1lelegatc Henry Cabot Lodge said
recently.
Lodge said after Thur5day's sessions "I
regret tG state I could discern no will·
ingness to negotiate on their (the Com·
munl.sts') part."
Ill Wind. Blows No Good
Storm Downs Trees, Poive r Lines in Illi no is
Callterale Tempe rttture•
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WILL PAY YOU
°lo
FOR EVERY
YOU SAVE
GUAWnED GROWTH ACCOUNT
Anaheim Savingi 9uaran1111 o .S.2.S'/. onnuol interest ,ate, c.ompoullded
da11y. You'll eom $30 for 1v1ry $100 you 1ove in o ur Guaront.-4 Gtewtt.
Account if account is maintained for 5 yeor1 ond interHt ocrvmulotes.
Guaranteed Growth Account• ore opened with any amount of $1,000 or"'°''· High
earnings ore al10 available on 1hon1r term accounts of 3 or 4 y.on. A.sit for detai'I•
on spKial withdrawal r1quirement1.
,
5.250/o 5.380/o
OUll&llTllD INCOME ACCOUNT
Anaheim Savings Guorante•d Income Account
earns o auaran!Md .5.2.51. onnual ·011, com·
pounded doily. Earnings will be paid lo you
every quarter for the period you d11ignol9--
3, 4 o r S year•. D•posit an y omount of
$1,000 or more. Ask for d•toils on special
withdrawal requirements.
50/o
IONUS ACCOUNT
On Bonus Accounll we poy the s y; current
fl nnuol rote quorterty plus '%'%' o nnuol henus
if held thr11 years or loriger. Accounts opertff
for $1,000 or mar..
PASSIOOll ACCOUNT
You earn 5.13-(, annuol yield wh•n oll HVi"gs.
and inlereit t1moin o year ff the .5'/, curr•nt
onnuol tole is mointoined ond compounded doily
for o yeor. Interest 11 paid for 111act day.in to
••act day·out. And, fund• r1c1lv1d by the 10th
of any month eom from the Isl when they remain
on deposil until the end of the quort1r.
At Anehtlm S1Yln91 you 11m th• h19h11t lnttrut 111 the nation; 1"4 IN
'"•urtd up to $15,000 by th• Ftder•I Savings 1nd Lotn l111 ur1nc1 Corper1tlott.
JO IN US
SEE AMATEUR RADIO OPERATORS CONTACT PEOPLE
THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
STATION K6SYU/6
The Anaheim Amateur Rorlio Club will be operating llw1 ••• from out Moin ef&e
lobby. Join ut for a cup of caffM or punch ond tolk to people a round the world.
DA ILY OPIRATING SCHIDU LlS July 1st · 10th
11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
•
ANAHEIM SAVINGS
AND L OAl'J A SSOCIATION
3JNC& 1921
JiolAINO~ 117 Wat ll!.w ... An. 1 •11 M11,, ''"'' 17'0 Stuttt INI • .,,,. • "'"'lie'"', Cellltfflll Hu,.l l"SIO,, ae,~h. C.llf, a .... C.llfwllle
I'll. 1·1SJJ ll. e ese1 .IA. f.4171
,.nr.e: COf41/1...llLNT PARl~JN(i AT ALL TH .. IE L.OCAT1c r·~
I
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lH1I T .........
AT RAINBOW'S END, ADORATION
Thou sands Lin• Up for e>n. L11t Glance
Goodbye to Star
Tlwusands File Past Judy
NEW YORK (AP) -In
death as in life, t h e
magnetism .of Judy Garland
continued undiminished today,
drawing thousands of ad-
mirers through the night and
into the morning to file past
her casket and bid goodbye,
"She's found that rainbow
now," fi.fary Roberts, a 2G-
year-old typist said quietly
after gazing on the coffin lined
with pale blue velvet. "I hope
she's finally got some peace."
They queued up for as long
as two hours in the gray,
humid afternoon Thursday
before entering the chapel for
a last brief glim~ of the 47-
year-old actress who died Sun-
day in London of an accidental
overdose of slttping pills.
"People identified with that
woman," said Marilyn Ford,
33, a Queeos bo u a.ewift.
"Ever)'one's got sadness and
problems, everyone gets lone-
ly. Judy Garland made all or
us feel something tied hct..and
us together."
At the scheduled midnighl
closing there were 3 , O O O
persons waiting outside the
Frank E. Campbell funetal
parlor on Madison Avenue at
East 81st Street, and Judy's
husband, Mickey Deans, asked
that the doors be kept open.
De.ans, who found Judy dead
in the bathroom or their
Chelsea cottage, also asked
that mourners be aUowed into
the chapel until an hour and a
half before the private funeral
service al l p.m.
Inside the fragrance of
flowers filled the air. ln ad·
dition 'to a mass of formal ·
noral tributes many mourners
brought their own bouquets
and placed them on the pews.
Many men carried single
roses.
Miss Garland was dressed in
the silver lame wedding gown
in which she married Deans,
her fifth hmband, t h r e e
months ago. Silver slippers
with silver buckles we r e on
her feet.
A dozen feet from the coffin
was a large wreath of peonies
shaped like a rainbow -for
Judy 's vocal signature, the
haunting "Over the Rainbow."
She first sang the song al
the age or 17 in the movie
"Wizard of Oz." She played
the role of a wail, Dorothy,
convinced that happiness lay
just over the rainbow.
ln., life, through her five
marrJ.8ges and a career that
soared to great heights as well
as skirted the edge of show
business oblivion, the rain-
bow's end always seemed to
elude· her.
James Mason, who appeared
opposite Miss Garland in "A
Star ..is Born," flew in from
Geneva 1 Sw i tier I an d , lo
deliver the euJogy. The Rev.
Peter Delaney, who married
Deans and Miss Garland, was
to officiate at the private
services.
Following t h e Episcopal
will be buried in 'Femcliff
funeral service, Miss Garland
Cemetery Mausoleum.
Hartsdale, N.Y., in
Westchester County just north
of New York.
Liberals Say Nixon
Weakening Vote Law
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Nl:<on.'s plan for
changing the 1965 law intended
to assure southern Negroes
the right to vote has been at-
tacked by House liberals as a
delaying action which would
"'eaken the law.
The proposal would extend
the voting rights act to cover
all 50 states instead of the
seven Sol!tbe:m states cur-
rently CQvered. It would ask
that literacy tests be outlawed
as a qua!Uication for voling
anywhere in the country.
nut the proposal drew
criticism from !!Ome liberals
who said it would dilute the
Goldberg :
Sav e Sirhan
NEW YORK (AP)
Fonner Supreme Co u r l
Juslice Arthur J. Goldber& has
written Gov. Ronald Reagan
of California asking tom·
mutaUolHf V>e death sentence
on Sirhan Bi.3hara Sirhan,
ususln of &but F. Ken-
nedy.
NoUng that he himself had
been !isled In Slrhan 's diary a!I
a n asu.sslnatlon prospect,
Goldberg said:
"The evolving standards of
decency that mark the pro-
greu of oor 50Ciety now con·
de'mn as barbaric and In·
human the deJlberale in-
!lituUonalized l a k i n f o!
human life by the state.'
original emphasis on the
South. One section that was
attacked would strike the re-
quirement the seven deep
South states get approval from
the U.S. District Court in
Washington or from the at·
tomey general before they
change any of their 1ocal laws
affecting voting.
Rep. William M. McCuJIGCh
<R-Ohlo), one of the key
Republicans who will be draf-
ting the bill, confirmed he was
among those who urged the
President. to recommend a
5imple extension of the civil
rights law rather than a
mod.ificalion.
McCulloch sat In silence
'11lursday as Atty. Gen. John
N. Mitchell outlined Nixon's
p r o po s e d modiflcalion11.
Liberal Democrats a n d
Republi cans on the committee
dismissed therh one by C'lne u
steps backward.
Afterward! the white-haired,
ruddy-faced McCulloch. a
member of the Prtsident'a
CommlssJon on Civil
Di....iers. pronounced Ni>on'1
plan "a weaker votini rights
ad than an extensk>n."
Meetings
,ltlDAY
Miit Vitl1 M1Mlftlc Lodtit, M1-'t
T.,...., 1C1 Utll SI., NtwpOrl
BIKl'I, 7:» '·"'· 0r1.-com It"'' ••di ,,,.._ Nt. Uf, ~llflfl"ltOfl INdt M•-lt
T_ ... Litt al'ld ''""' l'tun!l,,.lon
'"""· J:Jll "·"'· ti-' ..._,_ ltld1e 5'11cl~. lt~'91IJon 81.1111111,,,, U'll 9tltiM
l!llvd .. fir<ttlOrl l!l@Kll •••. in. ........
O.rl1!h11t tlu11-·1 '°"""!ti-, 11•"-l1r Cl\ltl. M1-I klC.h, ,,. ,,,,,,
·.
•
ANAHEIM
+H N. Euclid 535.8121
Mon. thru Sot.
I 0 o.m. to. 9:30 p.m.
!"""· J .... 27, .1969
•
SKINNY IS NEW, SKINNY
IS NOW: THE BODY-HUG
'
Long on cling. es leen as we 've seen, it's the slimmest
slither of shirting you cen wear this season. Pour yourself
into this knitty new length of Enkolure®• nylon ·by Weber
ond close up the look with fourteen tiny buttons. Red,
novy, blue, gold, wine, wh ite or block, sizes 10-16, 11 .00.
Meil and telephone orders inv ited.
Blouses, Shirts, 66.
*T.M. of Americon Enko Corp.
J ..
NEWPORT HUNTINGTON BEACH
•
47 Fo.hion blond 6+1· 1212
Mon. thru Fri. I 0 o.m. to '1:30 p.m .
7777 Edinger Ave. 892·333f
Mon. thru Sot.
Sot. I 0 o.m. to b p.m. 10 o.m. to 9:30 p.m.
' -...
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•• [DAILY PILOT EDITOlllAL PAGE I
Eyesore: Poles, Wire.s
I
1
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City Planner Joseph Tomehak estimated recently
it might lake Laguna Beach 200 years to see the last
of overhead utilities.
It sounded lik e a figure from lhe air had been used
to under1ine a very real and unsightly problcn1 .
But was it a figure from the air?
lt has been estimated for San F'rancisco that it
would take about 235 years to place overhead lilies
underground at the present rate. Figures for Laguna
Beach, South Laguna, Dana Point and San Juan Capis·
trano apparently are unavailable.
Very likely they should be calculated as a bench~
mark for and an incentive to get on \vith the job.
It's a cinch that the present amounts budgeted
annually by utility companies are only a token beside
amounts needed. Laguna. for instance. will sec three
year5 of undergrounding aJlotments, $66,000. spent to
place about 900 feet of \•.'ires out of view .
City Engineer Joseph Sweany observed that the
city could be struggling to underground the do\vntO\\'ll
"for a long, long time at that rate." He might have
said tor generations to come.
The city planning commission has passed a resolu·
lion directing the planning department to conduct an
in·depth study on how to speed up removal of the eye-
·sores that cnss-cross our skies. Commissioners a~
parently intend to Jean on the problem.
Tomehak, in claiming other cities are accelerating
undergrounding at a faster rate than Laguna, hopes to
find. out how much money is being spent elsewhere to
determine if apportionment is equitable.
An exact study is needed. Cost figures and other
technical data must be gathered. They are the basic
tools in conducting the fight against our crowded akies.
Tt will still be a long and costly battle.
. Dirty Joke
I Has All But
Dis~ppeared
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
-
-
A colleague in the news room S<'nt me a
brief inter-offiet' memo not long ago;
"The dlrty joke: has all but disappeared. I
seldom he.at one. Two years ago, I en·
countered a couple a week. maybe more.
J llill meet the same guys with the same
frequency. No. no jokes."
·This has been my experience, too, and I
am glad. Not because I object to dirty
jokes: per se, but because not one in a
Jumdred was truly funny -but you felt
you had lo laugh (at least weakly ) lo
derponstrate your virility and good
fellowship.
J think the rapid increase. in sexual
perm1ssiverress in th e U.S. the last few
years has killed of£ the dirty joke. A dirty
joke is basically a "reaction-rormation"
to sexual repressiveness in a society ; it
is not a normal outle t for humor.
t.1ANY SOCIETW have not had any
dirty jokes, and would not und erstand or
appreciate them -not because these
cultures are puritanical, but quite the OJ>'
posite, because th ey are permissive in tt.e area of sex, and find it In-
comprehensible that we smirk and snig-
ger about a subject that to them is as
simple and natural and obvious as
breathing.
It is no accident that in Denmark last
~ear, when all censor5hip of pornograph-
ic material was lifted, sale of pornogra-
phic literature on newsstands dropped al·
mOl5t to the vanishing po int.
lN HlS RECENT book, "Rationale or
the Dirty Joke." G. Legman points out
that ''The almost total prohibitiveness of
Help keep Laguna Beach beautiful
•.• hose down a hippie!
-D. J.
our cultu re toward the three primary Im·
pulses of the newborn and growing child
-the oral. anal and genital in that order
-con trasts worse than a1most anythlng
else about us with the to l a I
permissiveness, In re.gird to these ume
impulses in children, Jn more advanced
societies, such as the naUvts of
Okinawa."
It may sound slraOJe to our ears to
hear Okinawa cited u a "more ad-
vanced" country than ours, but it is part
or oor national pride and prejudice to
believe that because we bave attained the
highest level of technJcal and material
accomplishment in the world, that
therefore we are similarly superior in our
socil.!, ethical and suu•I aWtudes.
A JOKE IS generally a form ot anxiety-
release, and aomeUmea it ii a useful and
nectuary fo nn, as when soldiers jest
berore ba ttle. Bul the dirty joke indicates
the amount of reprewd anxiety about
5ex in our society; It ls a mark of psycbic
slavery, not of freedom.
Our shifting sexual standards will no
doubt drift too far into laxity before they
are corrected, but I beHeve the gener1!
tendency is a healthy one, and that out of
the chaos and confusion there will come 1
more realistic and more humane con-
ception of sexuality in our society than
we have yet pe rmitled ourselves to Im·
agine -except through the distorted and
distorting medium of the dirty joke.
Elders Have Job to Do
Excerpts from a state1nent by \V il·
liam K. Coblentz of Son FrancUco, o
member of the University of Califor·
ni11 Board of Rtgents. as published ut
the June 16 issue of UniVt"rsi ty Bul-
letin:
"\Ye elders ha\'e a job lo do in fulfilling
our obligations or public trust. \\'c ca nnol
wait for the young lo accept \\'ithout
question our idca!l and ou r policies ror
time is running against us. \\le cannot
really lry to outwit or out maneu\'er
lhent because H we do a new generation
will appear and take their place tra1nrd
by those we have tereporarily outv,,itted.
If we declare war, verbally or throu,11h
tactics of repression, society in many
aspects far beyond the university campus
Is affected.
"J PLEAD FOR understanding on bot h
I
Guest Report
' .
skies of the generation gulf. The young
should try to understand !hat most of us
11a nl to improve socie ty, not to destroy it
in the transparently unlikely hope of
making it better by mak ing it wor!:ie. We
rldC'rs have lo understand I h e
restlessness and ferment combined with
idrali~m R"'lflne niany ... r lhP vouncr.
·"! hc1 c ar.: 1J1 ob<ibl y <i;-, 11\ <i 11 /
misdirected elders as young people and
a~ many virtuous ones in both camps. It
"''ould be folly to ignore the motivations
of those bent on confrontation for con·
frontation·s sake. It would be equally ir-
l'!sponslble if we did not rerogniie good
fJith when it is evident.··
,---------B!I George----------.
Dear George:
Yoo're always poldng lt1n <1t ad ·
.vice columnist.s. Doesn•t this make
other advict columnisls angry aod
aren't )'OU •·orried~
B.S.
Dear S.S.:
How in~ world do you think ad·
·vice c:o1umnlall would flnd out I
-mUlol fun al !html You don't thlak u .trice column!W actuaUy
read tbtse th{ft&I, do you 1
Dur G<qe:
1 bavt HedYed 1 itltet from my
son who is in the t>.111rlnes. He li&ys
he lost his last month's pay gambl·
Inc in a gam' of poker with t>.farine
noncoms. Are Mari ne nonroms
aU01l'cd to gamble "'1th rookies '
t:.A.
l.)toa r E.A.:
\\1hen 111ar1ne nonet1ms ph1y
poker \\'lth boots. they aren ·1
aambllne.
~Send you.r mosl puu hng pro-
blems to George -lhry help him
piss I.he lime in his maximum·
aecurlty "ard.)
As one reporter noted , most Orange Countia ns t~
day would know it wasn't so i! fabled Chicken Little
shouted . that the sky is falling. There are too many
miles of wires and poles boldlttg it up.
\Ve should not leave this legacy r.o our unborn
generations .
The Sex Educa tion Flap
The disproportionate flap over Capistrano Unified
School District's relatively careful tr eatment of sex
education now has the PTA Council and anti-sex educa-
tion forces at loggerheads.
The parent group which supports family life educa·
li on as it is given in the district is in concert with a
citizens committee appointed by trustees.
The committee had decided there is a need for the
fan1ily life program. So has the PTA Council.
But anti-sex education forces recently maintained
that a handful of persons on the PTA council had pres·
sured school officials into adopting sex education addi·
tives to the family life program.
This seems patently untrue. In the first place PT1\
organizations aren't that exclusive. They generally re-
flect a pretty sound cross section of parent opinion.
Certainly in the Capistra no district the matter has been
aired repeatedly.
Sadly, this seems once again a case of Well·mean·
Ing persons tilting at a menace that hasn't rnaterialized
loca11y. The broad nature of the accusations -in place
of specific objections to given elements of the cum.cu·
lum -shQuld make normally prudent onlookers a bit
•kepUcal.
'Free press? Mw1, we ckm 't even believe in. free speech.!'
{l)
When President Joh11son Halted Bo1nhing •••
Three-point 'Understanding' Existed
WASHINGTON The NI x on
Admlnistr1tion has Informed Congress
that a three-point "understanding " with
North Vietnam did exisl, unwr itten but
'iulte explicit, when Pres.ident Johnson
halted the bombing of the North last
October.
The Secretary of Defense, ~t elvin R.
Laird, save that unequivocal assurance
in clo:ied-door testimony late in March .
Laird said the understanding was one of
the ground rules in exlstCl\Ci! when he to-
ok over the Penta1on a month earlier.
The secretary said he had discussed the
matter personally with his Johnson
Administration predecessor. Clark Clif-
ford . He testified that he had also talked
about it with Cyn.is Vance, U. Jobn-
AdminislratJon's number two negOti'ator
at the Paris peace talb.
LAIRD SAJO Vance told him there was
an understanding that, if the bombing of
North Vi etnam were baJted, "three basic
points" would be followed :
-No operations carried on by North
Vietnam through the demilitarized wne,
the DMZ.
-Major population centers Jn South
Vieln1m would not be "indiscriminately"
attacked with rockets or bombs.
r
; <' 1\.lleq-Oo lcls111ith
l
South Vietnamese government
spokesmen would be assured a voice in
lhe Paris peace talks.
Laird stressed that the understand ing
was "not in writing." He left no doubt,
however. that such an understanding had
been entered into with the North Viel·
namese.
The secrellill'y is also reported to ha\'l'
outlined just how, as he under stands it,
the arrangement came into being.
¥VANCE, TOO -After Laird's
testimony, ind perhaps as a re sult of
hearing about the secretary's rial and
positive statements about the previously
speculati ve understanding, men1bers of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
began asking questions.
Finally, Chairman J. William Ful-
bright 0-Ark .. asked the Slate Depart-
ment for information on the reported
understanding. Apparently the Nixon
State Department enlisted the help or
Johnson negotiator, Vance, to elaborate
on the louchy matter.
In any event , Vance. came to
\Vashington from his New York City
headquarters on May 15th. He discussed
the underslanding, at some leogth. with
Fulbright and some or his colleagues. in
Fulbright's private oUice.
The substance of the understand ing, as
Vance then outlined it, was just as Laird
had described it: No DMZ attacks, no in-
discriminate shelling of cities, and South
Vietnamese spokesmen would have a rol e.
in substar;ti ve talks in Paris.
NO VERBATl~1 transc ript was takrn nr Vance'.!. statements in Fulbright's of·
fice, though a memo was prepared later
froni notes. Laird was testifyi ng on the
record , however, and a declassified
version of his remarks will presumably
be made public in due course.
That rr.ay wen produce some flap . both
here and in Paris.
After the bombing halt. of course, the
rocket ;itta cks on South Vietnam popu\a.
lion centers were re.sumed. There were.
according lo U.S. commande~. repeated
violations o( the demilitarized zone by the
North Vietnames('.
Therefore, Laird's forthright comments
wi ll al most certainly be challenged by the
Communist side in Paris, and lhe ex.
istence of any unde rstanding al all,
denied vehemently there.
llERE lN THE United States, publita·
lion of Laird's statements will lend itself
to a different sort or controversy. It may
well contribute to the already mountinJ'
criticism of President Nixon by the usual
anti-war critics and by others.
Vance's former boss, Ambass ador
Averell ~Iarriman, has already joined in
that criticism. Others, especially the
Dcmocr<:.tic "doves" in Congress are gel-
tlng ready to do so vigorously now that
President NU:on ha s called them the new
isolationists.
They will have a new and open avenue
rtr thei r complaints when it ' i~ offfclally
confirmed that there was. in the dying \
days of the Johnson Administration . an ~
understanding with the Communist 5ide
with regard to a certain de-escalation of
the fighting .
Critics will surely dismi ss the Pentagon
claim, that the North Vietnamese retired
only t.o regroup for an attack again this
spri ng. They will be asking why Nixon,
li ke1John50n, has been unable to expand
and broaden the understanding reached
last fall .
Confused Concept of What Guilt Is
By GEORGE R. HOFF, Pb.D.
1'.iuch of our behavior ls based upon a
confused concept of what guilt is, and
what it means. We 've learned to reel
guilty when we violate moral, ethical or
religious princi ples: and we're motivated
to do the right thing in order not to feel
guilt. Wh en we do lhe right thing. we feel
guilt-free and this improves our self·
esteem.
But being Intell igent. we often use this
concept of guilt self·protectively, by mak-
ing it work for us and against others. \\'e
turn it into a "security shield"
\\'hich protects us and helps make sense
out of our other1\·ise perplexing conduct.
\\'E SJllELD ou rsC'l ves by disavowing
responsibility for ou r t.ctions and. in·
stead, blame our conscience, superei u,
value syste1n, sense of right end wronc.
cit.'. For example. to say "I "'on't cheat
on my spouse because I'll feel guilty
aboul doi ng it," in1pties that it is our
~ill. rather than ourseh·es. \\'hich mak('!!
the dec ision to re1naln raithful.
Interestingly, institutions such as t11c
government, church, and education heir
perpetuate the delusion that it is l)arl
behavior that is \loTJng. not us. \Vht.iL
must be remembered is that institutions,
per :re, are conc<'med with their prin·
ciples more lh <in \lo"ith the people they
represent. Whe n a church, for exa1npl.·.
insists that Its n1embers act accord ing 10
ccrlain prescribed rules. it infers th<it •he
person "'ho is beha\'ing is less important
than the ~ha1·lor.
ANO IT FOLLO\\'S that if a person
uses a church - or son1e other ini;tilution
-as the final authority which dispcnst'S
lru th for a price, he buys guilt in order to
avoid feeling it.
Rea l guilt is not based upon what we
ha\'C done \\Tong. "'rong action produces
Quotes
A~aemblym111 f'.,,•d Wakefield. Hun·
Unato.a P1rk -"Those who sell
dangerout drugs to !I minor, or anyone
else. are In the: ca te1ory of one who
would murder, and should bf! made to
pay far their crlme."
Everyday
Prohlc1 11s
feelings of 5hame. Real guilt slC'ms from
a fttling of not ha\'lng done enough : it
belongs to the unfullilled \vish. not th<' ac·
tion. However, contrar·· to 1vhat Jesus
said, we tend to place more va lue on ac·
lion thin upon intention.
THE NEUROTIC usrs gui lt to evade
action. The psychological ly hea lthy pcr·
son realizes his guilt when he hasn·t ac ted
accord ing to his true and total inner at-
ti tudes and intentio ns. The neu rotic use:5
irre!ponsibility as an excuse: the hea rthy
person is guilty \\•hen he is irresponsible.
ll may be seen. therefore, that real
guilt is part or everyone 's characler
6lruct ure: it cannot be a\·oided. We art
all guilty because none of us has evrr
done enough in every situation ; \Ye
ha ven'l fulfilled our Intentions or poten-
lla l. Parcnthcllcall y, shame is also an
clement of our character makeup.
because everyone has done something
·wrong acrording to our, or someooe
else ·s. standards.
ACCEPTING REAL i;u11l and shame
h<'lps to remind us of our humanness and
to live with our deficiencies. Not I C·
cepting them may le ad to lhe defensive
use or neu rotic: guilt to feed the delusion
that actions are more important than in·
tent ions. Real guilt is not a problem;
neurotic guilt is.
In fact, real guilt is beneficial because
it helps keep us honest with ourselve;;.
Neurotic guilt, on the other hand, is sell·
deceptive and self-defeating, and detracts
us from knowing ourselves.
Each of us must distinguish our re.ii
from our neurotic feelings' of guilt.
Sometimes professional help is required
lo untang le the web of feeling5, but o!~tn
a realiiaUon of differences between them·
can help us lil·e v.·ilh ou rs elves .nore
ptac:cfu lly.
Live Longer: Take Afternoon Nap
Jun1plng to conclusions:
When the world is loo much with you,
lhe-best \l'ay to get 3\\'ay l'roni ii all is to
take a nR1>. People who take a regular
Afternoon nap worry less and live longer
than lho6e who \\'aSle their energies
brooding O\'er problems about which they
can do nothing.
Nothing i:-irnJX1ss1blc to a 111a11 1\'ho 1.:an
cat raw clam s -and enjoy then1.
There has been a lot of crit ic1sn1 lately
of America's "industrial·1nilitary com·
iileli ." \Yhat mo..<:t or us \\'an! to kno11·,
ho1Yever , is how 1\·e can become
members of It and get our ra ir share of
the profits from defensive palriolis1n.
THE WNGER a novellst writes, the
lazier he usuall:Y is . He expects the
rtader to weed the prose he should weed
himself. II is far easier to \loTite a bad
nol'e] of 800 pages than a &ood one of 350
pages.
Apples now cost up lo 20 cents or more
('llch in Menhatlan supermarkets. If their
prices go much higher, ii may ~me
cheaper to 1ee your doctor lh1n to eat an
apple 1 day to lttep him IW"f.
Nature tries to hlde her mistakes: halC
the girls who wear minlskirb frustr1tc
her by N!Vtailina: them.
\\I E FRP.:T ABOUT how ~·c will t~cr be
1ble to 1fford lo send our children to col·
Hui
'. I ~, . \
B<>yle · , '
l<'gr. but parenthood is a tough ordeal for
birds. loo. Take a mother robin, for ex·
amp!r. She 1nust pro,•ide each of her
cla1norous brood of nesllin~ wllh 14 fee t
ur wor1ns every 24 hours. ll is a wonder
thal the orange feathers on her breast
don't turn gr~y.
About the only exercise some people
ge l toda y is pointing the finger of scorn.
If you want to invest your money safe--
ly, lend lt to a man who still wears spa ta.
He is too old-fashioned to be dishonest.
A l\IAN WITH a new sel or false t.eelh
usually brags that he c•n eat anything.
But if you lunch with him at a rcataurant,
you wtll noti ce he orders chicken 1 la
king or corned bt'Cf hash moTf Dften thin
he does S1eak.
lt's • _funey thine 1bout the businesi;
world -the harder the decisions 1n ex·
ecutive hns to make. the sorter i1 lhc
cushion In his swivel chair t.hrone.
It is true tht1l every des hai his day : it
Is al!IO true that every da1 something
h~p1>e11S to !he averu.ge auy to make hlm
fttl Uke a dog.
JN READJSG the Monday 1nornins
newspapers. isn "l it amazing to note over
1 period of lime how many Sunday
golfers are slruck by lightning -and
how fe\I' people are hil in church?
If a fellow wears an ill-filling sweater
that a girl knitted him. his chances of
escaping marry ing her can be put con·
liervatively al IOO·to-1.
----
P rid a y. June 27 . 1969
' Tl1tr editorial paQI o/ the Doily
PUot .tcekl to inform and slim.·
ulate rtodtr1 bll pre.te,•dng tl1il
new1paPfr'1 opinions end com-
mentary on topics of inure1t
and signijiC(fftcr, bt1 providing d
(orion f or &Ill!: 1zpr11ston of
our renders' opinion.s, and by
pre.senti110 tl1t diver&e vU~
pohtU of inform1d obs1:1W"t
ond spokeimt,. on ttpica of th• dou.
Robc.rl N. Wocd. Publisher
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JEA~ COX, 494-9466 ,,..,.,., ,,_. v, INf L .... ll
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FASHION IN HARMONY-Mrs. Jay Pyle and Mrs.
William Truman (left to rigbt) are ready to parade
patio and sun fashions from Deauville Lingerie at
Opera League's upcoming benefit fashion show and
salad luncheon. Mrs. W~liam H. Bruggere (right)
will comment on the fashions coordinated by Mrs.
Uoy4 Seilset.
Operp Le;gue s Fund Raising • • ' J •
Salads, Style Tossed
FLIPPERS•WET -.Mrs. Thomas Johnston (right) incomlng1Jreoident of.Mer-
maids; Women's Dtvtsion, Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce, is · ready to
get her flippers w9t while Mrs.· Jack H. Howe, new first vice president, hOlds
the Art Colony's symbol.
Me·rmaids Take Plunge,
Pool Planning Efforts
salads and fashions will be. tossed together into one
Magic Island Fantasy benefit Tuesday, July 8, spon-
sored by Opera League, a support group for Lyric
Opera Association of Orange County, in the Laguna
Niguel home of ·Mrs. C. Sidney Johnston.
Combining fund raising with fashion watching,
league members and guests wearing informal attire
will enjoy cocktails at noon in the gar.den. befor~ sam-
pling the wide variety of salads and vtewmg patio and
sun styles from Deauville Lingerie of Laguna Beach.
Special attention will be given to a preview of
muu muus and South Sea island attire in anticipation of
the league's annual luau to take plac~ in Au~st.
Hawaiian music will set the background with arnplif1ca.
lion provided by Beacon Television.
Mrs. William H. Bruggere will comment on the
fashions modeled by the Mmes. Jay Pyle, Leroy Vine-
yard and William Truman and coordinated by Mrs .
Lloyd Seilset. Mrs. Johnston is in charge of the luncheon
and is assisted by Mrs. Jack M. Lyons . Hair fashions
will be designed by La Contessa of Laguna Beach.
Mrs. William Hinwood will preside over a short
business meeting before members lounge around the
pool to play bridge or discuss the group's activitie1 in
Lyric Opera Association of Orange County's production
of "The Sound of Music" which will be given in place
of opera this summer.
It ts boptd enough profit will be earned from the
widely popular musical to erase the deficit from past
operas and give future productions a sounder financial
footing, explained Mrs. David J , Erikron Jr., league
publicity chairman.
Marni Nixon, the singing voice o! Natalie Wood in
"West Side Story," Audry Hepburn in "My Fair Lady"
and Deborah Kerrjn both "The King and I" and "An
Affair to Remember," will sing the leading role of
Maria in the production set for Sept 5, 6, 121 and .J.3 in
Irvine Bowl.
The classic Rodgers and Hammerstein musical will
be under direction of Kent Johnson. Eugene Ober wlll
be musical director and will conduct a full professional
orchestra.
Others performing outdoors under the stars wUl be
Alan Bergmann, Capt. Von Trapp; Andree Jordan as
the Mother Abbess; and Sue Hannon as Elsa, and Al·
ired Dennis as Max.
Curtain time is 8 p.m. and tickets !or the 2,500 seats
are available by reservation. !'rices range from $6 to
$2 and reduced rates are allowed for groups, students
and service personnel. Tick~ts are on sale at the Festi·
val of Arts box office,. 494--3900 , at Automobile Club of
Southern California offices and at all Computicket lo-
cations,
Opera league members work throughout the year
to help support opera in the county and often have to
choose between attending an actual performance or
assisting backstage. They also have been :.een address·
ing envelopes, pouring coffee or assisting at auctions
for the opera cause.
Reservations for the fashion show and luncheon
may be oblained by callirig Mrs. Dewayne Hurst, 495-
5594 or Mrs. Bernhard G. Anderson, 494-2974.
Mrs. Thomas Johnston has been elected to lead more than 100 wom-
en in 1'-lermaids, Women's Division, Ulguna Beach Chamber of COmmerct
and will be installed at a membership luncheon meeting in September.
?\{rs. Johnston was vice president of the group last year when she
also served as chairman for the first seminar of Orange CPUnty women'•
divisions, chambers of commerce, a group which she also will lead next
year.
Other Mennald officers will be the Mmes. Jack H. Rowe, first vice
president; Cyril Nugent, second vice president; E .W. Reed, corresponding
secretary; Mary Sheldon, recording secretary, and Doris Lindsey, treas-
urer. Mrs. Pete Fulmer, outgoing president, also will serve on the board
-for the coming year. ·
Mermaids also have annouuced that the final beauty spot award of
the season has been presented to 'Craig E. Corbett of 900 Temple Terrace.
Speaking of the award, ?i1rs. Clifton Nichols, chairman, praised the
owner for completely changing an Jmportant resi<tential corner from a
neglected appearing home and yard into an outstanding beauty spot.
While luncheon meetings will cease during the summer months, 1 several other Mermaid· activities will take Wace. Mrs. Robert Souter is
chairman of an information booth the groUp will sponsor during the dura.
Uon of the Festival of Arts July I to Aug. Z4.'Women from se~en"illiferent •
organizations will staff 'the booth dur\ftl, t)ie ,six-week period. · · . .
. Mrs. Robert PeacOck:; cbairm&ii of the beautilic~tion ~mmltt.ee,
plans to have regular weekly meeting of .her corrunittee in order to keep . beautiflcati~n projects in motiop. MrS. Robert Jqyce, recently named secre-
tary of the Qrange County chamber w9men's divisions also will be ·t>usy
helping to plan two seminars for the coming year.
No Smoke or Fire Needed to Get Grape V.in ,e Tan.glad Up
DEAR ANN LANDERS' My husband
and 1 have been married 21 yean. We
have a 1ride drcJe of friends and have
done a good job ol raising three splendid
Children. I would aay our marriage b bet·
ler than most.
About fCIUr month! qo l """'lftd three
telephone calls from friends who wanuod
~ to know the{ ~ so sorry to bear
that Fred and are gettln& a divorce.
j'ted reoelved two such calls at his place
of b.Jalneu. Neither of us can figure out
""' llWtecl the 1tory. Yesterdly I received another lllch call.
Appar.nUy the rumor hu slarled again.
h there any way we can trace these
;oornpletoly false 1tor11$T Why slarl
tbtmT Wb,J! -WONDEIUllENT
ANN LANDERS
cording to their father, the chlldren will
suffer severe emotional trauma unless
they dlmlnlab contact with ihe old
genUeman. He wants to "spare them'' bJ
·llmlµng Grandpe'a vtslts to· once every -• -• ten-day1. "
DEAR. WON: 0..'t wute yoar time
•Id fJDff11 trrma e. tract dna ramors.
1r1 f~ umrarGq, frutntm1 ud
poltltlea.
Who 1tart1 tllem? It ctaW be UJbociT·
Wiiy? h'svy prtbably.
-DEAR ANN LANDERS : W• ado,. our
four grandchildren. My husbend ts com·
pleldy devoted to them, eopecla)ty tho
two lillle boys. Grandpa· bas been like a
father to tMm. Tbeir mother constdeni It
a blessing ti.net their own father was
never very attentlve to his )'Ollnl famlly.
Now that the children are getting more
articulate It ls apparent that they love
Grandpa very much. Their own fathei·
hu d~ided this love Is "unheaJtl:y''
bcc•use Grandpa Is ge1Ung .old (he's 1111)
and be may die ooe of these days. Ac-
~ mr .... 1n-1aw right? If you say so
we will accept this dedstOn. -SAD
DEAR SAD' Y t a -accepl lllelt declslom DI m•&Wr mt I 111. Tbe
_, <I tlle ,.,..U mul P"vaO, HI
-ti ... .,...,... .... or <I Au
Lnden. '
U lt'1 my ........ ,.. wa1, lien ttlo:
Tiie ltft elllldno .. , ,,_ a Gru.r,. 11
a opedal Hod <1 ltff, Tlldr lither -Id
he .....,.1 ft< tt. I lllt)le<I yo"' -1n-
l1w mull tlle alleciloo .U cblldru feel
for GramJll. HOw ufortuait that be
vltn Qrampt u ~mpetlUcia llsttad tf
u added dlmeuloo la ,.. nm o( .u
~ptcn, ' I
DEAR ANN: Thooe pal'tlitl who allow-
ed their 15-year .. ld ,.. to entortaln Hli
girlfrieod ln his bedroom ror three houri
be£oro dinner (with the door clMed) and
then allowed them to retllm to . the
bedroom alter dinner must be nuts.
Don't parenu realize that today a. t4-
yeaN1ld tld knows mort al>out sex than
his parents knew at 20? When my brother w., 18 he e.plalned to Mom and Dad
what homosexuals were and how they pL
thnt •ay. They were SHOCKED. ·
Tell parents to get· wtl.hJ It, Ann.. Lut
year two of my girl!riends had aborUaim
ln Europe and one nearly dieil becmle
&be tried lo abort henelf. They were 111
14 aod from go.called "better fllllillll."
-D. TROIT
DEAR TROIT' I doo1 -to 1111 'em. Yoa did. Bit good. TUUa.
Do you feel UI at ease ... out ol ltT JI
evuybody having a good time but '°"' Writo for Ann Landen' book¥, '"lllo
Key To Popularity," ...,looloc with ,....
nquest 35 cenls In coin and a lq, ..it-
addrwed, stam~ envelope. ,
AM Landers, will be 1lacl to bolp ,..
with your problems. Send tboril to•..r 111
care ol the DAILY PILOT, aocl°""l\a
slomped, sell~ .....topo. •
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J• DAii. Y PILOT F rlday, June 27, 1 %9
Candlelight Ceremony
-Marriage Vows Taken
•
MRS. J OHN CHARLES WASHINGTON JR.
' Monterey Ptnln1ula Honeymoon
r: • ... f ·t::·
•• I < '
MRS. STEVEN LOUIS PARLATO
St. Andrew's Nupti1l1
Victoria Griffith Now
Mrs . Steven L. Parlato
An e v e n i n g candlelight
ceremony united in marriage
the former Victoria Lynn Crlf·
filh, daughter of the John D.
Griffiths of Newport Beach,
and Steven Louis Parlato, son
of the Louis Parlatos of
MaJSapequa, N.Y.
St. .Andrew's Presbyterian
Church was the wedding set-
ting "&nd the Rev. Dr. Charles
H. Dierenfield was the of·
ficiant.
Following the double ring
nupUals the newlyweds were
honored during a reception in
the Irvine Coast Country Club.
Susan Dahlberg. cousin of lhe
bride from Huntington Beach,
circulated the guest book
among 100 friends a n d
relaUves.
The bride selected a white
orgallll empire style gown
with a watte au cathedral 1encth train beginning at the
!boulder. A short lull veil was
ca~t t.o a wide jeweled be.adblnd and lhe carried a
c~lng bouquet ~f lilies of
&be valley, ICepbanotiJ, pink
,_. llllClfom.
Mrs. Karen Griffith Frank,
lillir of Ille .bride from Costa
NB Auxiliary
Newporl Beldl Pollce Aux-
lllotY galhera lh• lul Tuetday
o1 I.be inooUI al 7:111 i>m. Loe·
aUon ii 1v1U1ble with Mn.
--· 175-lll9.
Mesa, was matron of honor
and M. Elizabeth O'Neill or
Vancouver was maid 1Jf h1Jnor.
Bridesmaids we re C a r o 1
Parsons of Snnta Fe and Nan-. er Parlato. the bridegroom's
sister. They donned floor
length A-line gowns of faille in
pastel shades of g r e e n ,
lavender, blue and yellow.
Lace . trimmed their Edwar·
dian sleeves and small flowers
made up the headpieces.
~fulticolored roses, b a b y ' s
breath and fern were selected
for their bouquets.
The benedict asked Joseph
Zwi Zwalgenberg from Tel
Aviv to stand as best man.
Ushering "·ere Dwight John
Griffith, the bride'3 brother,
Lorne Mallin or Vancouver
and Lynn Phillips of
Pasadena. Blaine W i I I i a m
Frand, nephew of the bride,
"'as ring bearer.
Among special guests was
Barbara Flagg o( Riverside.
The new Mrs. Parlato at·
tended Sprlngfleld College,
hfassachusett.s, and t h e
University of Ca I I 1 ornl a,
Riverside as a philosophy ma·
jor.
Her husband was a student
al Springfield College. Bard
College I n AMandale-on-
Hudson, N.Y. and University
of Munich.
Followin' a wedding trip to
San FranClSCO the couple wUJ
make thtlr home ntar Bard
COUege "·here the bridegroom
is earning his BA ln literature.
Before an altar banked with
a fan shaped arrangement ol
gladioli and white c h I n a
chrysanthemums and flanked
by double tiered candelabra,
Karen Lynn Krall excbangtd
wedding vows with John
Charles Washington Jr.
The Rev. Richard Busch of-
ficiated during the double ring
ceremony in St. PauJ's Episc--
opal Church, Tustin for the
daughter of the Louis E.
Krafts of Santa Ana and the
son of the John C.
WasJl1nit.On.I of N e w p o r l
Beach.
Flower glrl Tracy Hartung,
the brldegroorn's niece, scat·
tered flower pet.all in the
bride's path as she was
e~orted to the altar by her
father.
Candlelight satin and crw.n-
Ully lace faahloned ber bridal
gown, with the lace bodice
featuring long tdeeves and
pleated trim. Tiny satin cover~
ed buttons matched the full
saUn skirt, which swept into a
chapel train. A Juliet cap of
chantilly lace held her three
tiered elbow length veil of silk
Illusion, and she carried a col·
onial bouquet of white roses
and Ulles of the valley,
Matron of honor M r s •
Charles A. White and maid of
honor Miu Frances Jones
were gowned In posy pink taf·
feta belted at the wailt, with
ruffled · trim at the neckline
and full length sleeves. A pink
bow headpiece caught thelr
short pink illusiop veUs and
they carried three long ,atem·
med red roses.
Dressed in similar outfits
and carrying one long stem·
med rose were the
brideamalda, Mn. Lawrence
Bomar, Miss Gall Hudgins and
Miss Julie Gronemeyer.
Gregory T. Thornton was
beat man. Christopher R.
Kraft. the bride's m1Jther,
beaded the ushers wbo in-
cluded Kurt Dykema, Har-
rison D. Buyer, Jame a
Munselle and Geoff Tbompson.
Approximately 350 guesta
attended a reception i n
Orange, where Mrs. JamU
Klug was in charge or gift.I
and Mrs. Ronald P a y n e
citeu1ated the guest book. AIJO
auisUng were the bride's
cousin from San Diego, Mias
Victoria Beehler. the
bridegroom's cousin from Fort
Lauderdale Miss Gretchen
Wegener and Miu Pat Harvey
of Santa Ana.
Special gueats included Mr.
an d Mrs. Jo sep h
M.Washlngton, the
bridegroom's grandparents
from Orange, Mrs. Russell
Watcbter, his grandmother
from Tustin and Mr. and Mrs.
'Robert Lewis of La! Vegas.
Tbe bride was graduated
from Foothill High School in-
Sanll. Ana an'i:t attended
Califomla State College at
Fullerton. Her new husband
also is a Foothill High
graduate and attended Arizona
State University. He is
presently studying at Orange
Coast College where he is af-
filiate<! with zeta Beta Tau.
The couple plan to make
their home in Santa Ana upon
their return from a wedding
trip to Monterey and Carmel.
Bellflower
Graduates
Recruited
Tuesday, July I, will be the
deadline lo purchase tickels
for the reunion of 19&9
graduates of Bellflower High
School.
Planning the buffet dinner
which will begin at 7 p.m.
Saturday, July 19, are Mrs.
Albert (Janice Meech an )
Ramirez:, 866-2057, and Mrs.
Jeff ( Robert a Armttrong)
Minkler, 8-U-2497, who may be
contacted for reservations or
additional information.
Country Club
Dance Draws
Lone Parents
Taking to the dance floor at
Costa Mesa Golf and Country
Club tomorrow evening will be
members and guests o f
Parents Without Partners,
Crange Coast Chapter,
The dance will be preceded
by a cocktail hour at 8 p.m.
Co-chairmen for the et·eot are
l\lrs. Mary Henry of Newport
Beach and Kenneth Edwll.fda
of Tust in.
Single rarents are ln\'lted to
conbct Mn. Joan Gardner,
BM-1329, tt.t' lnlonnallo:i about
the rh:\ptcr, which also 111
r.lanning a pancake b·ukfl'::\
n Costa Mesa City Pa rk C)n
Sunday, June n, from t a.m.
to noon .
LT. AND MRS. DANIEL R. CLARK
Formerly Barbara Smith
Barbara
In South
Smith Weds
Dakota Rites
Exchanging thelr wedding
vows in the Emma nuel
Episcopal Church, Rapid City,
S. 0 ., were Barbara Smith of
Honolulu and Air Force Lt.
Daniel R. Clark.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Woodrow W. Smlth
of Huntington Beach, was
given in marriage by her
father, and conducting the
ceremony was the Rev. Han-
ford L. King assisted by the
Rev. Herbert W. Clark, father
of the bridegroom.
For her wedding the bride
selected a floor length white
silk linen dress. The simple,
prin~s lines were accented
with touches of embroidered
lace at the neckline and wrists
of the long sleeve3, and her
shoulder length veil was
gathered to a circlet of
matching lace. She carried a
white prayer book and a
cascade of white stephanotis.
Mrs. Harry D. Alfrey 1Jf
Newton, Kan ., was her sister's
matron of honor, and she was
attired in a pastel blue gown
and carried a large white
chrysanthemum.
Serving as best man was Air
Force Lt. Earl R. Wonning,
and ushers were Lbl. Donald
Beeks and Robert Carnes.
Following the ceremony the
newlyweds greeted friends
during a dinner reception . In
the Officers' Club, Ellsworth
AF Base, where a special
guest was Mrs. C. H. Walker
of Norfolk, Neb., grandmother
or the bride.
The new Mrs. Clarke Is a
graduate of Whittler College
and C1Jmpleted a year of
graduate study at t b e
University of Hawaii. She has
taught school at M a i 11
Elementary School, Hawaii.
The bridegroom, son of the
Rev. and Mrs. Clark of
Pueblo, Colo., is a graduate of
South Colorado State College
and now ls serving in the
Minute Man System.
The couple will make their
home In Rapid City.
Servicemen's Wives
Saluted Through Song
PIANO STYLIST
Jacquelin• ~lms
Rally of Ca rs
Gets in Gear
Members 1Jf Gamma Garn·
ma Chapter, Epsilon Sigma
Alpha International, w i 11
gather for their first car rally
Sunday, June 29.
The rally, entitled Crown or
Creation, will get under way
at 10 a.m. with registration for
drivers and navigators begin-
ning at 9:30 a.m. Registration
fee will be $2.
Trophies and prizes "'ill be
offered. For f u r t h e r in·
fonnation those interested
may call Shelli Ertel, $47-3711.
Cake Frosting
Class Offered
, What iJ more important
than the frosting oo the cake?
AU th~ who would like to
create cake masterpieces for
special occasions may learn
bow to tnake flowers, ruffles
and borders of frosting in a
special summer class opening
July 1 and 1.
Pianist Jacqueline Fa In
Nims will present })er piano
fantasy titled Fantasia in Red,
White and Blue for the Tues·
day, July l, meeting 1J!
Newport Beach Cb r is ti an
Women 's Club.
The Newporter Inn will be
the setting for the noon event
which also will feature
Children's Americana Fashion
Show presenting children's
wear from Sears.
Mrs. Nims, wife of Jerry
Curtis Nims, was graduated
from Florida Slate Uni,versity
with a BA degree in music and
was named to the dean's list
and homecoming court of the
university.
Recipient of numerous
honors and awards, she is a
representative of C a m p u s
Crusade for Christ Interna·
tlonal and presents her Fan-
tasia for numerous large
social gatherings which fre-
quently are hosted by wives of
governors or mayors.
The patriotic piano styling Is
a salute to women whose
husbands serve in lhe Armed
Forces overseas, particularly
in Vietnam.
Reservations. at $3. are
being accepted by Mrs. Harold
Fischer, 96i-1129, and Mrs.
William O'Brien, 54~3070.
Procedures
Established
Three officers from Orange
District are attending lhe
state board meeting o f
California Federation o f
Women's Clubs, Jun Io r
r.1embcrsblp, taking place to-
day through tomorrow in the
Newporter lnn.
Attending are Mrs. Terry
'Ibomas. Orange D I s t r l c t
president; Mrs. Arthur Korn,
Area D vice president, and
btr s. Frank Hughes,
parliamentarian and s t a t e
convention chairman fat lt'IO.
The meeting wtn provide the
necessary specWcatlons and
procedures for all tht In·
dlvidual federated J u n 1 or
women's clubi in the al.ate.
HB TOPS Club
Allen School ls the meeting
During Traditional Month
Names Linked at Altar
A booeymoon \rip i o
Elll<Mda followed lhe ftd.
dlnf ol 8ulan Ha}lell and
MlclJael Mayo, wbo uchanpd
VOWS Ind l1l!fl dUrlnc aJI
aft.moon ceremony In s~
Joachim's Cathollc Church,
Colla M ....
The bridal coypla, deulbler
and aoo of Mr. and loin.
Eugene R. Halletl Jr. of IA
Mirada and Mr. and Mn.
Andrew Mayo of Costa M,..
npeated their VOWI after the
Rev. 11iomu Nevin.
A lace 1own with a lull aklrl
and train lh•I fell from lh6
1boulden WU aelecled by Uie
bride. Her abort veil WU
caught to a crown of white
roses, and she complemented
her en&emble with a bouquet
of white roses centered with
pink rosebuds.
Mrs. David Hayes attended
the bride as matron of bonot
and bridesmaids were Mn.
Sue Stollberg, Mrs. Andrew
Mayo II and Mias Jodie
Milhouse. They were Iden-
tically gowned in soft pink em·
pire sheath dresses designed
with short sleeves, and lone
stemmed pink roses were
their floral accents.
Mayo, brother of t h e
bridegroom, served as best
man and ushers were Frank
Frand, Bob Oberhardt and
Eugene R. Hallett Ill, brother
of the bride.
Following the ceremony, the
newlyweds r e c e I v e d their
guests in the Monticello
Clubhouse; Costa Mesa, where
Miss Maggie Evenson and
Miss Anne Hart assi.ated.
The new Mrs. Mayo rece.iv·
ed her bachelon degree in ·
history and drama anC: her lile
teaching credential fl-om the
University or Calllornia, Santa
Barbara.
Her husband received his
MIU. MICHAEL MAYO
EnMnada Honeymoon
bachelors de~ In industrial
arts from Fresno S t a t e
College and his teaching
credential from the University
of Southern California, where
he wilt recei ve his masten
degree in August.
Los Angeles will be home
for the newlyweds when they
return from their honeymoon.
Hadassah Installs New Fabrics
Considered New officers for the Harbor
Chapter ot Hadassah were in-
stalled In a luncheon meeting
which took place in the home
of Mrs. Marvin Slipson.
Special installation officer
was Mrs. Sam Hoffman,
leadership training chalnnan
of the Southern Pacific Coast
Region of Hadaasah, the
Women's Zionist Organization
in America.
Incoming president for the
group is Mrs. Leonard Rubin .
To serve with her are the
Mmes. Allen Shafran, fund-
raising vice president: Marvin
Slipson, education vice presi·
dent; Martin Nemeth,
membership vice president;
Howard G~ller, program vice
president; Barry Michaelson,
treasurer; Stan Gott Ii e b,
recording secretary; Allen
F r a n k I e y , corresponding
secretary, and Gary Resnick,
financial secretary.
A Penn State Universily ex.
tension home furn1shings
specialist suggests t h a t
"homeowners consider where
and how a new upholstery
fabric will be used before it is
bought.
Fabric thal is suitable in
color. design and texture, and
is colorfast, soil-resistaot and
flame-resistant is a good
choice.
South Coast Plaza
3333 Brlotol 11 San Diogo Fwy.
Lower Mall Near May Co.
. '
Teeoage and adult cake
decorating classes will be
taught by Ellen Wulff, under
the sponsorship of the Santa
Ana Recrtatlon and Park
Department, In the Sanlt Ana
Community centtr Clubbou ..
Annex.
ptac• ror m•mbers or Hun-NYLON KNIT TOP tlngton Beach TOPS Pound
Pinch<rs 117 p.m. every Mon· Available in eight groovy colors -S-M-L $9.00 day. ..._ ____________________ ......
------------------------~
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SadilJehaek-• 'foday'• FIDal
E'DITtO
• voi:. 62, NO. 153, :f SECTIONS, 44 PA'•Es ORANGE d!>UNTY; CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1969 TEN COOS
Down tlae'
Mission
Trail
Clemente Okays
Profitable Trade
' SAN CLEMENTE -A land trade
between Brigham Young University and
lhis c\ty, wbich1 will relieve the city of
$500,000 debt fJW general obligation bonds,
ha.s been approved by the City Council.
The university will receive the 18.t.aere
s.it.e of the old sewage treatment plant at
the north end of town, which is sur-
rounded by the university land. 1n return .
tht city will acquire an equal-sized ~ite
adjacent to the industrial area of the city.
con.side.red an appropriate location for
new water recreation facilities.
e l\'ig,..,l Rezoning OK'd
LAGUN A NJGUEL -Rewne of 85
acres east of Crown Valley Parkway and
Chaparosa Avenue in the north Laguna
Niguel area from agricultu~al and pl~n
ned community use to single family
residential has been given final approval
by the Board of Supervisors.
e Old Wesl Doy S lated
LAKE FOREST -The week or June 30
through July 3 will be "Cowboys and In·
juns" week , organized by the . ~ke
Forest Community Assn. The act1v1l.Les
are for children ages 6 through 12.
f\1onday will feature cowboy and lndian
stories and games, with Tuesday and
Wednesday devoted to lanyards and
headbands in the craft c I ass. e. s.
Y.OIJP.BSlers will go horseback r1d1ng
TtiufWe y preceding the Fourth of July firewor~ tt\&play sponsored ~y the local
Ji.ycees. Additional infonnat1on may be
obtained by calling 837-0161.
• Flood Work Bid Set
_. CAPlSTJl.A.NO -Bids will be opened
JutY 21-for repair of flood damage in the
February stnrms to main lines of Or~e
County Waterworks District No. 4 which
&erves the San Juan Capistrano area.
·• Booster• Rabe l'u11d1
MlSSlON VIEJO -In order to help
purchase a movie earner~ to ~Um school
sports, the Mission Vie)O Hig~ School
Boosters Club will operate a fireworks
stand Saturday, June 28, through July .4.
Tht stand will operate on the parking
lot of the 7-11 Market. across from the
Mission model homes on l..a Paz Road .
Fl'eC University
Discussion Set
In Laguna Beach
or. John Wallace, UCI profU'>O~; \'i'ill
present details on his pro~~ Free
University of Laguna Beach at Mon·
day's general I!'eeting o~ the Laguna
Beach Coordinating Council. .
City councilmen have agreed. una~I·
moosly not to endorse or Jive 1Lnanc1al
aid to the proposed univers1t~. .
The balance of the meeting will be
made up of elections for the new olflcers
of the or~anizalion. Nominated were Mrs.
Helen Keeley. president; Thomas A.
Murphine. first vice-presicit;nt: Jan:ies T.
van Rensselaer, second vtce-pres1de~t;
Mrs. Mary Fran Anderson. recording
secretary: Mrs. Dorothy Joyce, corres·
ponding secretary: and Mrs. Jane Boyd,
treasurer.
:Also nominated as directors are Rev.
William 0 . Eckel. Robert L. Reeves.
Vernon R. Spitaleri. Bernard F. Syfan
and Lil• Zali. The nominating committee was made
up of A. E. "Pat'' Worthington, chair·
man ; Mni. Anne Campbell , HaJTY Law·
rence, Joseph O'Sullivan, and Miss Bea
Whittlesey. The meeting. open to the public, will
be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Laguna Beach
l'~ederal Savings and Loan community
room, 260 Ocean Ave.
·Cycle Scramble
Set in Clemente
One of t~ country's biggest motorcycle
scramble.s will be Mged this weekend in
San Clemente when the Dirt Diggers
motorcycle club spoosors a tlCe on
Reeves Ranch between the freeway and
Com High,..y.
Over it>,000 spectators are .eipect.ed to
watch the race, to be run over a rough on~le. muse at tbt north end of the
Rttttt rubber plant. Cycles wiD ranee in
Riie lrom 100 cc to 758 cc. A apecial
"powder putf•.-racc will be he.Id Saturday
for the women.
Action slarts at 1:30 1.m. saturday and
1 a.m. Sunday.
• • -
DAILV P1LOT SllH Pllel9
WORLO TITLE HER GOAL
S.auty Cont•st•nt Wallace
Laguna Beauty
Sets Her Sights
On World Title
If the world isn't Lagunan Susan
Wallace's oyster, it is at least her goal.
Susan is the Laguna Beach represen·
tative to the Miss World Coctest.
First step toward that title will be
taken July 7 when the Lagunan will com-
pete in the Miss Calirornla.world contest
in Downey.
For a week. she will be con1peting
against about 40 other comely lasses ror
the Callfornia title.
The winner of the California litle will
then go on to Baltimore fo r the Miss
USA-World contest. Final competition for
Mjss World will be held in London,
England.
Susan, 21 , is a freelance model. She
graduated from Laguna Beach High
School and now lives in town by herself.
Her hobbies include horseback riding and
multi-media art.
Campout Slated
In-O'Neill Pal'k
About 80 members of the South Or-
ange County YMCA·s Gray-Y will trek
to O'Neill Park this weekend.
The campout will be attended by mem -
bers from the El Toro, Mission Viejo.
and Laguna Beach clubs. The Gray-Y
serves boys ages 9 through 12.
The agenda for the weekend includes
hikes, sports and songs by the camp-
fires.
Laguna Schools Approve
Budget of $2. 7 Million
Coacl1 Talk
In Laguna
Too Late?
By JACK CHAPPELL
01 l!lt Dllllf PUt! S11fl
Despite a two and a half hour talk
Thursday between resigning Laguna
Beach High School coaches, the school
board of trustees and LBHS Principal
Bob Reeves, nothing ~as changed in the
currenl coaching controversy. "-,.
Parties involved in the closed-door
meeting at district headquarters all
generally agree that the discussion
session was enlightening, bu l ac-
complished nothing tangible.
Neither of the opposing parties have in-
dicated a change in their posiUons,
although all say they understand each
other's positions.
The stalemate involves fjye high school
coaches wllo have resi gned or requested
leaves of absence from their coaching
posit~s.
The issue according to partici pants In-
volves coaches' work load and ad-
ministrative policies.
Some indication today was given that
the marathon discussion session may
have come too \ate lo have '@anCed
anythinii.
Norman Borucki, baseball coach, said
that if the 1ame talk had been held
months ago, I.he coaching problem might
have been averted.
As it is, Borucki said, everyone's posi-
tion became too Inflexible to be changed
during the conttoveny.
~le sa id all parties became too com-
mitted to back down. He noted that lhc
school board fee1s as if it has to back the
school administration and the coaches
have thejr own philosophies to maintain.
No elaboration on the details or the
situation were given and school official.3
have said only that the executive swlon
provided "an opportunity for dialogue
whereby assigrunents were discussed."
Hig h School Principal Reeves was
unavailable for comment today.
Eel Bowen, assistant varsity football
coach, sald that foll owing the meeting, he
felt that the school board members were
"sensitive to our position." However. no
indication of a change in policy was
given, he said.
Bowen said the meeting was "a real
good discussion." However, he said that
he will not be coaching next year.
As far as the school athl etic program is
(See COACH~. Pace %)
Stock Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The st~k markel
closed almost even today, with investors
reported cautious and on the sidelines.
Trading slowed near the close. (See
quotations, Pages 16-17).
The Dow Jones jndustrial average at
1:30 p.m. was off 1.16 at 869.12. Gains
continued to lead losses but by a nar-
rower margin than earlier.
lfp One Cent 8-cent Hike
Reagan Proposes In Tax Rate
Sales Tax Boost · Required
A tentative $2. 7 mi!Uon buda;et for 1981-
70 was approved Thursday by truattJ!S ol.
SA CRAMENTO CUPll -Gov. Ronald
Reagan proposed another one cent in-
crease in the sales tax. today as part of a
substantially revised tax reform pro-
gram.
Major amendments to his package
were endorsed by Assembly Republicans,
who previou.sly had been bitterly divided,
Sources said the GOP voted JS..3.for the
program in private caucus.
There was no immediate word whether
Democrats would go along with the plan,
11eheduled to be heard later today in the
Assembly Ways and Means Committee.
The increase in the sales ta:c would be
from five to six cents on the dollar.
Another revenue gainer would be a
readjustment of income t;>.x credits. This
wouki bring in $7 million. However, mid·
die income taxpayers with large families
\\'ould benefit.
The money would be spent for :
-Increasing the homeowners property
tax exemptton Crom $750 lo $1,650.
-Extending the home ow n er 1 e:c·
~.:. lo ..... ~:t· al dl!o''cltiun ,.,,. .
menta.
-Making permanent • 30 pen.ut
reduction in the buainess inventory tu.
-Doublln1 -cllllens' property tu
relief.
-lncr .. alng the 1ilocfanj Income tu
deduction from tt,000 to $1,250 for a
single peraon, aod from 41,000 lo 12,500
for married couples.
-Eliminating the sales Lax on pros-
thetic devices, Crull juices and cigar-
ettes.
-Reducing assessed va lues on open
space lands.
For the Bay Area Rapid Transit
District counties o( Contra Costa,
Alameda and San 1'"ranciSC1>, the sales
tax increase actually would result in a
6"1: cent rate. The legislature previously
raised the sales tax in those counties a
half cent to finance completion of the
transit system.
· Reagan's legislative budget sponsor,
Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle lR-
Riverside ), called this "phase one" of the
governor's tax refonn program. "Phase
two," which Includes v o 1 u n t a r y
withholding of the stale income tax and a
one percent increase in gross Income,
now will not be pushed as hard as the in-
itial phase , he said.
Biddle said there was "no urgency" In
the phase two portion because much of it
would ~ approval by. jhe 'tClllrs °"
Ille' 1"IO ballot .
Befort: the-l'rviskln, "p~'OD&,,. woutp hav~ raised only $UIO million in ioevenue.
New, it would net f465 million.
Tiie 'propet!y tu rolld 11'"1"""1 woold
r....it In a fl&I annual avlap for-the
8Ym'&lft homeowner with I $10 ta, ~·att,
Biddle said.
Tbe package will require a two-thirds
vote of each legislative House.
CofC Asking $48,975
To Promote Art Colony
Laguna Beach Chamber of Comml!rce
has asked the city for a recard $48,575
~upport in the coming fiscal year to han-
dle advert.Ising and promotion for the Art
Col911Y. The request compares to $39,800 sought
by the Chamber last summe r for the cur-
rent fiscal period.
City councilmen last July whittled the
request back to $35,000 and instituted a
ti&hter system of controls and review of
chamber expenditures.
City Manager James D. Wheaton said
he will have no recommendation about
the request, that it 's a policy matter for
councilmen to decide.
He said he has placed the full amounl
requested in the preliminary budget
package for whatever action the council
deems appropriate.
It is the eve of the fourth year that 'he
Chamber has sought bigger money for
bigger promotion. It began in t966 when
the Chamber went after $35,000 to help
stimulate off.season aa.raction to affluent
tourists.
Before bed tax, Wheaton said, Chamhcr
allocation from the city "used to shuffle
back and f<lrtb between $10,000 and
$15,000 annually."
The Chamber has argued that in-
creased promotion by the Chamber is
something like bread cast upon the
waters, that It multiples business,
economic benefits and hence pays for
itself and more in increased sales tax and
bed tax..
Councilmen last year went along with
detailed recommendations of Cou ncilman
Richard Goldberg, a fonner chamber
president for three years.
Staling last July th at the Chamber had
been somewhat negligent in rtporting the
progress of its advertising program,
Goldberg called for a three-man com-
mittee (including a councilman) to watch
over expenditure of funds. 'Mlis was in-
stituted.
the Laguna Beach Unified School
District
The $2.729,458 spending schedule la ba£.
ed on an estimated dlllrict uaessed
valuation of $80 million and would requir6
an estimated lax rate of '2.60 per 10l
assessed valuaUon -an increa"' al
about eight ct!nls over this year's lax
rate. The 41H:ent bond interest and
redemption ratt may drop a few peMiel.
The budget allows foT the spending c.r
about $800 per stu dent figured on a11
average daily attendance of about J,OOJ
students.
School officials point out that this ten-
tative budget is just that, tentaliw. It la
subject to change berore final budget
adoption in August.
The most important consideration ''
how closely the estimated asseued
valuation of the district matche!I tbl!:
county assessors tally of district worth.
II the estimate is over I.he assessor's
figure, cuts will tiave to be made, while if
I.he tsllmate b low, the di.strict wiU have
more money lhan It ftgured on aod aome
additions can lie made lo the budget.
"One of the problems here is that Wfl
have lo make a nwnber ol major
decisions before we know ..._ modi
money "''re Solne to id.'' Dt. Wlllilm Ullom la!d.
To further tangle the web of acbool
finances, a number of bills now in tbe
legislative bopper could affect matters.
The budget calls for the spending of
a'Jout $19,000 more for teachers' salarie!I,
• figure which may change before final
budget adoption deptncUng upon Ute oow
pending salary talks.
As presently comJ)ORd, the budgt't
calls for sptnding about $36,000 more
than the district takes in, the difference
to be made up by dipping Into the reaerve
account.
Laguna Hills·· Fire
lnjures\Vorkman
A workman was injured in a 'ttnnday
tvening fire which caused an estimated
SI ,050 damages to a Laguna Hills Leisure
World apartment, tbe county Fire
Department reported today,
William England, 34, Santa Ana, who
was installing a water softener unit ln the
apartment of George Fahey, 2031-H
Mariposa East, received second degree
burns on his left hand when a leaking
welding tank caught fire .
Four county fire department units
responded to the 4:19 p.m, blaze, lwo
from Laguna Hills and two from El Toro,
'Opry' Founder Dies
NASHVILLE, TeM. (UPl)-Edwin W.
Underground Progress Slow A few days prior to Goldberg's recorn-
menda tions, Mayor Glenn Vedder said
(July 8), "I think the whole council is
(luite unhappy about the Chamber of
Commerce disposal of the $35,000 last
year."
Craig, 76, one of the founders of the
Grand Ole Opry and nationally prominent
111 the insurance industry, died late
1'hursday night of a heart a.ilmenL
Oraage
Public Vtility Lines Still in Sight at Art Colony
By TOM GORMAN
OI lllt Dll"' Pllli S"ll
Laguna Beach Planning Commissioner
Joseph Torhchak recently suggested thal
al the CUrrt'!nt rate of progress, it mighL
take 200 years to get all public utillLy
lines underground in the Art Colony.
Tomehak might have made the slatc-
ment with a bit of lmlfUt in cheek, yet
the fa cts suuest his estimate might noi
be too far off.
Laguna Mayor Glenn V e d d c r
acknowledges that cash avallablt to
remove ugly overhead wires is S<l meager
that the job can't be accelerated unle.~
citizens take act.Ion by forming im·
p1'0\'tmellt dlltlida.
Rici>• -' Soulllen> Califomla EdllOll Company b •J><ndi118 16.5 million a yeor
1" g•l Its electrtcal·syolem uod<!rground.
This figures OIJt' to be a sptndlng
allowance of $2.M per Edison customer.
So Laguna Beach 'has been allocattd
$22,UOO annual:; for underground utility
projects.
Yet to po.t lhe underground cash in con-
J
text. consider the job or undergrounding
only 1,000 feet or power lines in front of
the. new Civic Center in Fountain Valley.
That short-distance job cost $56,000.
And in order to accomplish that
rclallvely. small taik, Edison had to ac·
cumulate four years of allotments for
that city, for the initial year in 1967
through 1970.
Undergrounding has to be dOne hand in
hand with both Edison and t h e
telephone companies. But G e n e r a I
Telephone ha sn't been told to spend a
certain allotment of funds for un·
dergrounding; they must go foot-for·foot
with F.dilon, whatever the cost.
Due to the type and number of wires
the ttlephone companies deal with.
thoua:h, their costs run less than Edison.
WhUe Laiuna has never initiated any
siuable undergroundlng projects in the
past, a small one is In the making at the
pre.ent lime.
CJty Councilmen May 21 approved 111
project that would pllce underpound
utilities along an alley (rom Ute comer or
11'.ennald IJ1d GleMeyre lo 1IO !oel IOlllh
•
of Laguna Avenue.
The total distance ls about 900 feet.
The Edi.son Company has $66,000 -three
years' alk>lments for Laguna -with
which to work.
"We can be downtown for a long, long
time at that rate," said City Engineer
Joseph Sweany.
C'.eneral Telephone will also be involved
in the project, foot-for.foot.
The project amounts to a token
t;esture. But it's a start, and it took three
years o! allotmenta for the first step.
Actual cost will be determined by
Edison engineers wlpiin 30 days.
City Planners have alJO pa,ssed a
re.!OluUon dlrtetlna the plannlni depart.
ment to conduct an in-depth study, to find
·ou t how lo speed up rtmoval of tl1c
eyescores.
Tomehak, In clahnin& that other cities
are aece.1en.Ung at a falter rate, boptS to
rind out how mu~ money is beina spent
In other cities, and II tht 1pportJooment ~equitable.
Accord.Ina: lo l!'idi110n'1 figure., of A.89
per · custamu, it l&.
.(
On lhe basis of $35,000, Goldberg said
the committee would have the task: of
decided how much o! $22,000 would be
spent on direct advertising and j.lro-
motion. The remaining $12,800 last year
was marked for salaries and office costs.
Wheatnn said both categories are up
this year in the proposal but said he has
not really studied the items yet. He said
the chamber attributes the sales and !ll.-d
tax. growth to its promotion program.
Wheaton said he upectcd the maUcr
would be studied along wllh the rest or
the budget at a July 9 study session and
possibly the entire bud1et would be up for
adoption July 15.
Hodges Escapes ·Fire
CHAPEL !UL!., N.C. CAP ) -Lulhcr
II. llodgea, 70, former North 'Carolina
governor and u .s. secretary of com.
mer~ from 19'1 to 1965, broke a leg
wh<n he Jumped !rom Iii< •econ<! lloey o!
his home as it was swept by fire Thurs-
day night. ·
He also su ffered smoke Inhalation but
waa "'Jl0!1cd In nUllaClorr comlltlon In
• bolpilol.
'
·Coast
Weather
The mornings will be nothing to
write home about, but the week·
end afternoons will be pretty nice,
with sunshine and temperatures in
the low. ?O's aloog lbe coast.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Apollo Commandtr Ntit Ann·
strong '"2lml"'1onkn to bt /it!t
man on the moon, sap /ormtr
NASA "voice" Paul Hane11. Sic
story Page 7,
1
.. .. ~ .........
J DAllV 1'11.0T l
"i w
•.Judy Gave AIJ-1 ·
Jam.ea Maaon · EulosUsel Singer
• N!W YORK (UPI)' -A<tor James
· M11ocreul~ JU<IY Garland today u
• • •'U)e f\nldell gtrl lD the wot\d" who gave
...,. to her ...il<ncel and friends than
abe recdved in return. (Earlier story,
Papi).
. 'lbe eulogy, releued an hour before the
f\meral of the 47·year-old 1ingu-actre.5li,
prmsed Miss Garland as "a person wbo
Cavt richly both lo her vut audience and
her lrl<DCb, but needed to be repaid."
'lier ll'Ulesl gilt, be llld. w11 Ibo ability
''lo alJli ao that it would break your heart..
"a. ...w •"'• 111111 "" _,.. Ille ..... al .,. al ......... ....
sadly. ..... .. --
More than 10,000 Garland flllS pessed
her bier at an east aide funeral chapel
during the lylng-in-stat'e Tbunday and
through the early. boon of today. Her
husband. Mickey Deans, ordered the body
to remain on view continuously until
prtparatioas for the 1 p.m. fuoerJ.1 be&an
at 11 I .II\.
Sil mourners were 1P line when the
cblpel doon were cbed and they were
tl.lrDed away, diuppointed.
Nixon Flies to Canada
For Seaway Anniversary
MASSENA, N. Y. (UPI) -Pre&ldent
Nixon Join<d Canadian Prime Minlot<r
Pierre Elliott Trudeau at the border to-
, day to cmnmed'lorat.e the 10th an-
, niversary Qf the St. Lawrt!l'ICe Seaw.,.
Tbe two htad:s of slate met at the
mooument to lnternatlonal friendship on
the Rebert Moses-Robert H. Saunders
. Power Dam. One leg of the compass
··-shaped mooument bin the United States ' -aod the other in Canada.
··: After meeting at the monument, Nixon
~.and Trudeau cot into I &edan and drove
. -to the Dwight D. Eisenhower lock.
" Thousands were on hand to i"'t Nixon
~ •nd wavtnc Canadian and American
;' Oap.
The President flew by presidenUal
'helicopter for hls meeting with Trudeau
after landing In Air Force Ont at the
Platt.burgh, N.Y. AFB.
· . Tbe two lree world leaders greeted
:t.ach other at the lite where Queen
"Elliabeth and President Elaenhower
dedicated a portion of the seaway 10
years •go.
After ceremonl.al speeches rededicatln1
· the Dwight D. Eisenhower lock, Nixon
· and Tnideau fle w to Montreal lor a tour
of "Man and His World," an lntemational
apos!Uon on lbe site or Eipo '67 on lie
Saint-Helene.
Canadia n officials blocked tt off for the
•· _day bec.tUM ol pouible demonstrations.
• • •
Aliso Pier Site
Niton laal saw Trudeau wtten the
prime minister vi.sited Washington A-1arch
14 and 25. He was the first world leader
to meet with the new President in
WllBhlngton.
'San Joaquin
Trustees Okay
Schools' Budget
San Joaquin Elementary s c h o o I
District trwtee:s Thursday approved a
tentaUve 1969-70 a.chools budget of about
~.975,000.
The &prawling district of 10 schools
serves the Saddleback Valley area in·
eluding Irvine, El Toro, and Mission Vie-
jo.
Business superintendent Rex Neri:son
aald the budget could increase the
general purpose tax rate 34 cents from
11.3$ to perhaps IJ.61 per 1100 a.,.ssed
valuation.
The &pending schedule calls ror lhe ex-
penditure of about $642 per &ludent. Of.
ficiah predict an average daily at-
teodance of about 7,&00 students through
the school year. Tbe final bud&et will be
adopted in AUCIJSI.
Ho~e '.OKs
'Stopgap~
Surtax Bill
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Holl!e
gave final congressional approval today
to stopgap legislaUon to conUnue througb
J uly payroll withholding for the 10 per·
cent Income tax surcharge U1al expires
at midnight Monday. (Earlier story, page
7).
Both. Democratic and Republican
leaders predicted the House. woukl ap-
prove Presidtnl Nixon's laJ package -
cootalning an e1tension or the tax. itseU
-on Monday.
The tax bill, as recommended by the
\\'sys and Means Committee at Nixon 's
request, would Cilntlnue the surtax at its
10 percent rate for six more months,
through 1969, and at a five percent rate
for the first six months of 1970.
Today 's bill was necessary, most mem-
bers agreed, to avoid chaos in private
and governmental pay offi~:s which
otherwise would have been forced to
recompute pay checks and recalculate
w\lhholding totals for transmission lo the
Trtasury Department.
Even most opponents of the surtax
extens ion joined in urging passage of the
emergency measure, which had been ap-
proved by the Senate Wednesday.
They pointed out that today's bill does
not affect the ultimate liability of the tax.-
payer.
In the end , there was so litUe object.ion
the bill was passed by voice vote.
Leaders sought lo nail down the votes
on which they were counting to pass the
tax extension bill Monday. B o l h
Democrats and Republican managers of
the blll"were conlident it would pass.
The bill originally had been set for a
House vote Wednesday. It was delayed at
the last minute when a nose count failed
to produce a majority for it.
RepubUcans 11ubsequently solidified
their ranks behind the measure and
Democratic leaders felt they had counted
enough additional Democratic votes to
put It across, so the vote was reset for
Monday.
OAIL Y PILOT Miff Piii!•
Drawing on photo indicates approximate location of pier from nearby property O'\vners. Pier will extend
future Aliso Pier. County 1upervisors r~affirmed about 500 feet 0:ut to sea from present paiking benn support for project this week despite obj ectt!lns to and will cotl about $600,000.
~~~~~~~~~~~"'---~~~~~~
DAllV PILOT
DlAHO~ C0#.11 PUil ISHINCi COMHdilY
K1"-t N. W114
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Vkl Prulttal .,.. Ckntrel MINMt
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Sit1kll1g Sailboat Sig11als
Fo1· Help; Eight Aboard ·-th.,,. •• A. Murp~i~• "'-""!"'••lier
a;.~,rd '· Noll ........... «" Cit? llfltw ......... .,,,...
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Cutters and airrralt were rarin1: to find
a sailboat sinking somewhere off the
Orange Coast today with elghf perrions
and Only a :slx·man liferaft aboard, fol·
lowing a 7:40 a.m. disaster broadcast.
No one aboard the vessel Identified only
as the Valkyrie knew her exact position
except somewher• south of the Channel
Islands, offering a. vast search area.
SpGkesmen for the I llh Coast Guard
District's Search and Rescue ctnter In
Long Beach said no fUrther news had
been received shortly before noon.
'"\\'e·re just not :sure where :she is," he
added.
A r a d i o broadcast mOnitored In
l>.lonterey at 7:40 a.m. said lhe Valkyrie
had ej&hl persons aboard, but neither
they nor the ship's home port were lden·
lilied in the Mayday distress call.
CGast Cu.arda:men ln Long Beach ukl
the tath Coul Guard Dittrict w11 m1tn.
t•lnlng furlsdlcUcm of the sea aearch, but
the Soutllt.nd unit was espected to take
over hy noon.
Todliy'g broadcast said tbt V1lkyrle
was almo.1t fount1uing with waler In the
tnglne compartment clear to the deck.
plates aod a pump would bt requJrcd to·
keep her afloaL ·
Despite the fact she carried 1"1>
persons 1nore than her lifeboat is de sign·
cd lo hold,. spokesmen said. the Valkyrie
reportedly ca r r i e d l\fejack.ets for
everyone.
She also carried a supply of 22
emergency Jlarrs in case the starch
:should carry through into darkllei:s to-
night, depending on the Valkyrie'• uncer-
tain position.
Coast Guard spokeimen said the
sailboat left San Francisco June 25 eo
route lo Santa Barbara, but It was not
determined whether :she put into lhe Cell·
tral California harbor or pustd It by.
1'wo ~foot patrol cutteri. a reacue
helicopter and a fixed-wing aircraft were
dispa1ched from the Coast Guard base in
the Port ol Los Angeles to assist in the
aearc.h.
Co11111os 288 Launched
MOSCOW !UPI) -The Sovltt Union
today laun~ an unmaMed ute!Ute In·
to an almOJl identical orbit v.'Jlh another
sent up three days ago.
Tt.'IS said Cosmos 286 "'as launched to
"continue exploration of outer space."
. " . ..
CAIL Y PILOT l ll H Ptwtl
Tough Choice Ahead
\Vith annual July 4 Lifeguard Beauty Contest fast
approaching, Sleepy Hollow lifeguard Steve Foster,
22, v;•ill soon have to choose his beach's represent.a·
tive. He appears to have narrowed choice down to
three hopefuls. From left are Sue Davis, 19, Candi Mccue, 18 (on his lap), and Robin Springe, 16 .
Building Bids
On Fire Stations
In Can yon Set
New bids for construction of the
Mission Viejo and. Modjeska Canyon fire
staUons will be aceepted Jn August, the
Board of Supervisors decided Tuesday
after a one-week delay.
Supervisor Alton E. Allen who asked
fo · the delay, moved rejection of all
previous bids alter hearing proposals by
Building Services Director Joseph J,
Smisek ror a revision or specifications to
bring the cost of each facility below
1100,000.
Bids on the Mission Viejo station rang·
ed from $125,500 to $139,058, compared
with an estimated cost of $85,307. On the
l>.1odjeska station bids ran from $125,S!O
to $130,973, with estimated cost at $84.351.
After conferring with Architect \Villard
T. Jordan of Costa Mesa, Smisek re<=om·
mended that the l\fission Viejo station be
changed from concrete block to wood and
stucco construction to save at least $6,000
and that other items be eliminated in
order to save $3,000.
He :said tha t conferences with pro-
spective bidders indicated new bids
should be under $100,000.
County Fire Warden Elmer Osterman
objected to any delay citing several e1-
amples in which delays actually led ta
higher costs on today's market. fie
pointed out that the site had been donated
by the A-1isslon Viejo Co. reducing lbe
cost by some $25,000 to $30,000.
On the Modjeska station, Smisek said it
v.·ould be redesigned to allow use of pre·
fab materials.
Black Magic Plea Fails
LONDON (UPI) -A Nigerian mother
was sentenced to three mont.is in jail
Thursday for beating her son with an
electric cord because she thought he was
under a black magic spell that kept him
ismall. The woman had pleaded innocent.
Good Samaritan Picks
Up Hitchhiking Thief
A· good samarilan who picked up a
hitchhiker for deposit In Laguna Beach
Thursday found her purse $19 llghter.
Police said that Peggy Porroe, 17,
S1u·fing Tourney
Forms Available
Entry blanks are available for the 15th
Annual Laguna Beach Surfing Tourna-
ment , to be staged at Brooks: Street
Beach July 12.
The contest, open to Laguna Beach
surfers only, includes six events. They
are :senior and junior (17 and under} men
surfing, senlor and junior men board rac·
ing. il1>dY surfing and skid board (ages l.2
and under).
Entry blanks are available al city hall
and the Oak Street guard tower. Entries
must be turned ln with a $1 fet'! by July 10
at city hall.
Kennedy Hit on Note
To Irish Association
BELFAST, NQrthem Ireland (AP) -
The Northern Ireland government criti·
cized Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (0-
11us.), today for cabling his support to
the Ulster Civil Rights Association, which
has been at the center of recent wide·
spread political strife.
Prime l\Iinister James Chichester·Clark
said in a statement: "I do not think it
desirable for legislators in one country
to involve themselves in the internal af-
fairs of another."
Fullerton di scovered the money missing
after letting out the male hiker in lbl
600 block of South Coast Highway.
Both the purse and the long-haired
hitchhiker were in the back seat, &he
said.
In another theft repGrt, Jack W. Raw-
lins, 1008 S. Coast;.iiighway, told police
that two IG-spet(j racing bikei ~
love seat with hand-carved legs ~been"'
stolen from the unlocked pafe. The
loss was $180.
Kathy Ann Tatum, 18, iOS·A Griffith
\Vay, reported the theft oI a purse with
$19 and identification from an unlocked
car in the fOO block o( Cress Street
A garage burglary attempt at die
home of Barlene B. Phillips, 990 Mea·
dowlark Drlve, had failed because of
an electric lock. The would-be bur&Jar
had cut a hole in the door near the lock.
Fron1 Page 1
COACHES •.•
concerned, coaches were told that ap-
pl~cant.s for their jobs were wa.iting in the
'v1ngs.
Dr. William Ullom, district super\n·
tendent, said today that two teacher
vacaneies now exist in the field of social
science.
"The people thal will be employed will
have coaching &kills," he said. OUJtr
coaching position& may be filled by
present staff members, he said.
Coaches involved are: N o r m a n
Borucki, baseball Cilac.h; lightwei&ht foot·
ball and basketball coaches Warren
\\1atki ns and Jerry NeumAnn ; Jack
Lythgoe, varsity track coach and Ed
Bowen, assistant varsity football coach.
Summer Safe
STARTS TUESDAY, JULY hr
Our Annual Sale will feature many famous groups, from
such lines as DREXEL. HENREDON, HERITAGE. Also to bo
i.-cluded in the sale are all of the upholstery items in stock,
plus speci al order upholst ery me rchandise at substantial
savings . Acce ss ories, lomp s ond pictures will bo reduced.
Don 't hesitoto , .. come in ond make your se lections now.
You will bo pleasantly surprised at the 1 a r g e variety of
qual ity furniture on display now at real sav in gs.
Drexel's sale merchand ise will be redu ce d st arti ng Mo nda y,
June 30th.
wt All SOllT POI ANY INCONTIMllNCI CAUIP IY THI CONSTlUCT10N WOii ON WUTCL"P DllYI. THii i IS
WY ACCIU l rAllUN• AT THI II.Al OP OUI STOIL
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EXCLUSIVE DEALEU fOit, HI NREDON -DREXEL -HIRITAt;E
to DAYS NO INTEREST -LONGER TUMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED tREDtr
NEWPORT llACH
1727 W1tlcllff Dr., '42·2050
OPP JllDAY 'flL t
INTlllORS
,roftttlenal lnttrlor
DMltntn
Ava!Ta-lo-AlD-NllD
LAGUN.\ tlACH
W North C-1 Hwv. 4'44SS1
Oflfl •11DAT i 1L t
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Newpo~t Barbor Today's Final
N.Y. St.oelu
VOt:. 62, NO. I 53, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1969 TEN CENTS
! Sales Tax Hike Sought l
Reagan Asks /ump to Six Cents; GOP Backs Plan
( I ••
• 1 •• I l
•
"' • •• l • ' • . " "' ,,, • •• • • I
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DAIL y l'ILOT ""'" br ltldl•nt KNhllr
Checki1ag Out Pipes
Betsy Staub, 14, inspects 66-Ulch pipes to be used in portion of $300,000
storm drain and street resUrfacing project currently under way in
\Vestcliff area of Ne\vport Beach. Major part of project involves
\Vestcliff Drive between Irvine Avenue and Dover Drive. New sewer
lines and water main also are being installed.
House Approves 'Stopgap.'
To Continue 10% Surtax
WASHINGTON CUP!) -The House
gave final congressional approval today
lo stopgap legislation to continue through
July payroll withholding for the 10 per·
cent income tax surcharge that expires
at midnight Monday. (Earlier story, page
7).
Both Democratic and Republican
leaders predicted the House would ap-
prove President Nixon's tax package -
containing an extension of the tax itself
-on Monday.
The tax bill , as recommended by the
\Vays and Means Coinmittee al Nixon 's
request, would continue the surtax at its
JO percent rate for six more months,
through 1969. and at a five percent rate
for th e first six months of 1970.
Today's bill was necessary, most mem-
bers agreed, to avoid chaos in private
and governmental pay offices which
otherwise would have been forced to
reeompute pay checks and recal culate
withholding totals for transmission to the
Treasury Department.
Even most opponents (lf the surtax
rxtension joined in urging passage of the
emergency measure, which had been ap-
proved by the Senate Wednesday.
They pointed out that today·s bill does
Summer School
Signups Open
Summer school enrollment at Lincoln
Intermediate School, Corona del J\.1ar,
will remain open through Tuesday , July
l. Tom Outline, summer s es s I o n
coordinator, announced today.
Cour&es at Lincoln arc open to students
living anywhere in the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District who have com·
plcted fourth grade through eighth grade,
Dultine Said. There is space available in
mos~es.
Summer ses~ions arc 8 a. m. to noon,
~1onday throogh Friday, until July 25.
not affecl the ullimate liability of the lat·
payer.
In the end, lhere was so litUe objection
the bill was passed by voice vote.
Leaders sought to riail down the votes
on which they were counting to pass the
tax extension bill Monday. Both
Democrats and Republican managers of
the bill were confident it wou ld pass.
, The bill originally had been set for a
House vote Wednesday. It was delayed al
the last minute when a nose count failed
lo produ ce a majority for it.
Republicans subsequently solidified
their ranks behind the measure and
Democratic leaders felt they had counted
enough addilional Democratic votes to
put it across, so the vote was reset for
ri..1onday.
Sniper Fires
On Patrol Car
OAKLAND (UPI) -A sniper fired
about six shots today at a California
Jlighway Patrol car and a truck on the
Nimitz Freeway but no injuries were
reported.
One bullrt ripped through the patrol
car carrying oUicers James R. Lanier,
29, and James R. Wheeler, 25, near the
J05th Avenue overpass about 1:30 p.m.
More shots were heard shortly af-
tcrwdrd and truck driver Ray Hunter, 56,
Castro Valley, said two bullets hit his
cab, missing him by inches.
Police found six empty shells of 30-30
caliber.
Stock /llarkets
NEW YORK (AP) -The sloe~ market
closed almost even today, with investors
reported cautious and on the sidelint~.
Trading slowed near the close. (See
quotations, Pages 16-17).
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan proposed another one cent in-
crease in the Sl!-les tax today as part of a
substantially revised tax reform pr<r
gram.
Major amendments to his package
were endorsed by Assembly Republicans,
who previously had been bitterly dlvi~
Sources said the GOP voted 35-3 for the
program in private caucus.
There was no immedlate word whetber
Democrats would go along with the plan,
scheduled to be heard later today in lbe
Assembly Ways and Means Committee.
The increase in the sales tax would be
from fi ve to six cents on the dollar.
Another revenue gainer would be a
readjustment of income lP..X credits. This
Search Started
For Sailboat
After SOS Call
Cullers and aircraft were racing to find
a sail~oat sinking somewhere off the
Orange Coast today v.•ilh eight' persons
and only a six-n1an liferaft aboard, fol-
Jo\\'ing a 7:40 a.m. disaster broadcast.
No one aboard the vessel identified only
as the Valk yrie knew her exact position
except somewhere south o( the Channel
Islands, offering a vast search area.
Spokesmen for the 11th Coast Guard
District's Search and Rescue center in
Long Beach said no further news had
been received shortly before noon.
"We're just riot sure where she ls" he
added. ~
A r a d i o broadcast monitored in
flfonterey at 7:40 a.m. sald the Valkyrie
had eight per&ons aboMd, but neither
they nor the ship·s home port were iden·
tified in the ~fayday distress call.
Coast Guardsmen in Long Beach said
the 12th Coast Guard District was main-
taining jurisdiction of the sea search, but
the Southland unit was expected to take
over by noon.
Today's broadcast said the Valkyrie
was almost foundering whh water in the
engine compartment clear lo the deck
plates and a pump would be required lo
keep her afloat.
Despite the ract she carried two
persons more than her lifeboat is design·
ed to hold, spokesmen said, the Valkyrie
reportedly ca r r i e d Jifejackets for
everyone.
She also ce1.rried a supply of 22
emergen cy flares in case the search
should carry through into darkness to-
night, depending on the Valkyrie's uncer-
tain position.
Coast Guard spokesmen said the
sai lboat left San Francisco June 25 en
route to Santa Barbara, but it was not
determined whether she put into the Cr.ri-
tral California harbor or passed il by .
Two 95-foot patrol cutters, a rescue
helicopter and a fixed-wing aircraft were
<lispa.ched from the Coast Guard baae in
the Port of Los Angeles to assist in the
search.
Planting to Mark:
State's Founding
An Aleppo pine commemorating the
200th birthday of California will be placed
into the soil in front of Newport Beach
City Hall July I as the city observes the
state's bicentennial.
Ceremonies led by Mayor Doreen
Marshall will begin at 3:30 p.m.
The planting of the pine is being ar·
ranged by the city parks, beaches and
recreation department.
The public is welco1ne.
Army Gangs Up on Groins
Will Build Last Ttvo Beacli Barriers at Once
Anny· Corps or Engineers . ..st.aJ'f have
1crapped original plans to build their four
new West Newport groins one at a Ume
11nd today decided to start digging on the
remaining lv.•o.
The new plan should lop a month off
the expected completion date or the
$600,000 project, but the one aspect o( Ole
job that will cause a massive beach
c105Ure wUI sUll wait until alter L.abor
Day weekend.
City Harbor and Tidelands Coordinator
C~eori:e Dawes said the riew plan will
' mean digiaG ol lhe deep pit.s on the last
two crGina will st.art immediately.
Within a few more wetta the pits, will
be full of stones end all four groins will
be half-built, end.Ing at the surf linea.
The rock will be covered witb sand as
.soon as large cranes fin ish dropping the
granite, being hauled in from Corona on
cradle-shaped traliers.
The change in plans means beM·h
c~ure will be condensed, s.inct 150 !Cf't
either side of the digging wlll be off
limits to bcachgotrs.
The fil'Jt eroin at 56tb street bas reacl)..
td the 1urf line and is being covered by
bulldows.
Digglria fCft" the second one al $4th
Street is finished and the first stones
were dropped there this morning.
The next two street ends lo feel the
clamshcl' crane's bite will be 48th and
36th streets.
"Residents of the area "tiave been er-
tremeJy patient. So far We hJ've had only
one advtrse comment and that dealt with
the equlpmtnt storager. area.'' Dawes
said. •
would bring in $7 million. However, mld-
dle income taxpayers with large families
v.·ould benelit.
The money would be spent for:
-Increasing the homeowners property
tax, er.emption from $750 to $1,650.
-EJ:ttDdin.g the homeowne r s ex-
emption to welfare recipient,, and
residenls of elder citizen housing develop-
meols.
-Making pennanent a 30 percent
reduction "1·Uie business inventory tax.
-Doubling stnior citizens' properly tax
relief.
-Increasing tbe standard income ta1
deduction from $1.000 to $1,250 for a
tingle person, and Crom $2,000 to $2,500
for married couples.
-Eliminating the aales .tar on ~roa
thetlc devices. fruit juices ~nd cigar·
etle.s.
-Reducing assessed values on open
space lands.
For the Bay Area .Rapid Trafl!lt
District counties of Contra Costa,
Alameda and San Francisco, the sales
tax increase actually would result in a
8'7S cent rate. The leglalature _previously
raised the sales tu in tho8e counties a
haU cent to finance completion of the
transit system.
Reagan's legislative btJ9gel sponsor.
Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle (R-
Riverslde), called this "phase one" of lhe
governor's tax reform program. "Phase
two," v"hich Includes v o 1 u n t a r y
withholding of the state income tax and a
one percent increase in gross, Income.
now will not be pushed as hard as the ln·
itial phase, he said.
Biddle said there was "no urgency" In
the phase two portion because mucb or it
would require approval by the voters on
the 1970 ballot.
Before the revision, "phase one" would
have raised only $100 million in revenue.
Now, it would net $465 million.
The property tax relief propoul would
result in a $165 annual sayings for the
average homeowner with a SlO tu :a~.
Biddle said. ·
The package will require a two-thirds
vote of each legislative House.
CofC President
Asks Outside
Jet Noise Help
Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce President Dick Stevens today call ..
ed for city hiring Of an ootaide consultant
to report on the potential damages <'Pf t:JI:•
panded commercial jet traffic over the
Harbor Area .
"We must do all po.ss1ble 10 dtfend
ourselves against the pos!ible blight of.
our lovely communky lhroogh further ex-
pansion o( com mercial jet flights,'' he
sa id.
He said the consultant reports would
provide more than gene r alized
statements and emotional appeals as
armament against further commercial
• jet expansion.
J "We ·strongly recommerld that the city
t retain ouuide consultants to carlduct
.
BLACKPOOL BOBBY TAKES AIM IN ·COSTA MESA-
Sgt. Cordeiro Offers Pointers on Flre•rm1.to Vi11tor.
• Bobby ID Town
Law Problems Same in England'
Constable Colin Ryder carries a
truncheon -billy club to the poUce in the
"colonies'' -but he and a Costa Mesa of·
ricer rode the beat together Wednesday
night, lawmen who faec the same human
problem throughout Christendom: people
who can't get along with other people.
The 24-year-old officer from !he
seacoast resort of Blackpool, England
was preparing for ~ guest shift or
busman's holiday before going back to
duty Monday after a four-week visit with
Harbor area relatives.
'VAST DIFFERENCE'
"We were juot discussing the vast dif-
ference in departmental operations, yet
the common problems we run into," said
Sgt. Sam Cordeiro, after conducting
Constable Ryder on a tour of the modem
Costa Mesa Police Facility.
';Domestic quarrels and pub brawls."
added Ryder, "they're a waste of time."
"People are people," Sgt. Cordeiro
observed philosophically.
The basic police philosophy Is diffrrent
!n Britain than the U.S., in potential deal-
ings with their people, however, and
Constable Ryder carries only h I s
night.stick and a pair of handcuffs.
EQUIPMENT'S BE1TER
"I think the most outstanding dif·
ference here l! the carriage of guns, and
of coorae the equipment here i! bttler
than back home," said Ryder, a member
of the 7 ,D<M>-man Blackpool constabulary
five years, counUng cadet or reserve
status. ..
Does he consider weaponry advisable
for the British bobby, a term ln·
cidenLally, which has been replaced by
the more contemporary copper.
"I ca.n'l even bold a ,un long eoough to
aim." he joked. as SJt. Cordelro'a.heavy
.38 callbt!r police special wobbled In his
hand while he £aced a tar1't ln lhe Ila·
Uon'1 buement firit11 ran11:~
One reason is that Enallstl lawmen
rjiitely netd (UDS.
••JD the Loodon.aru,,tbete·are·qulte a.
1
few robberies with fireanns. but the
farther north you go, the knife is more
o:ir;nmon and or course easier lo deal
with,'' Constable Ryder explained.
In comparison to the Great Train Rob-
bery, spectacular crime in England runs
more to the paperback pages of Jan
Fleming's James Bond novels, with ar.
occasional ol'fense worthy of headline
coverage .
''What we would call notable al home is
an everyday occurrence over here," said
the young lawman, who has been hosted
for the past month by his brother John
Ryder, owner of Newport Beach's popu·
Jar White Horse Inn.
''I can think of some strange assign.
ments I've had though," said Constable
Ryder when pressed, "like mixing cock·
tails for the prime minister."
British lawmen frequently serve in
capacities one might find filled in the
U.S. by commercial security guard
services.
Normally, Con11table Ryder would
cover an assigned patrol beat~ but when
he returns to Blackpool duty next week,
it will be back to clerica l police records
work. 1
Just 17 when he was enrolled as a cadet
or police reservist, Ryder put in his time
unUI 19, after which he underwenl routine
police trainirlg for three months and was
assigned to full duty.
The next 24 months are officially pro-
bationary, until the rookie bobb)' proves
him.self capable or handling the job and
Constable Ryder, wiUl four years ln.
describes the future in typically British
sty I~.
.. Alter the two years, you just carry on
and on -and build a career."
'Opry' Founder Di es
NASHVILLE, ToM. (UPll-Edwln W.
Craig, 76, one of Lhe founders of Ute
Grand Ole Opry and natlonllly promin<nt
In the illlurance inc(uatry, died late
Tburaday n11bL o1 a 11t11t ai1mtn1 •
definitive studies in areas such as air
pollution, fallout contamination and
darnage, danser to schools. noise and
probable devaluation of property values,''
he said.
~~~ens offered the chamber's help In
sohcU1ng donations from titiiens to help
pay !or the consulting services.
. He urged careful consideration of his
suggestion.
"If such 11tudies had been made In
years past we might not be in our pi-aem
untenable position. Let us oot repeM Ulat
oversight," he warned.
Restaurant Gets
Hole in Wall
The Surfer Restaurant. al lhe oor• fl.' •·
22nd Street and West Ocean Froil , '1118" '
tained a minor wipeout Thursday ind
emerged with a 3-by-f>-foot hO!e in n;·
south wall.
According to Newport Beach poJict,
cause of the bole was an overshot rta6t
tum onto 22nd Street. A 1961 forelrn
sports car, driven by Kenneth James·
McKenna , 22, of 1401 West Balboa Blvd.,
missed the turnoff from West Ocean
Front, striking the curb, crossing the
sidewalk, and hitting the hamburger
stand's wall.
MeKenna was not Injured , but his car
was. Damage was set at $200. ·
Black Magic Plea Fails
LONDON (UPI) -A Nigerian mother
was sentenced to three months in jail
Thursday for beaUng: her son with an
electric cord because she thought he wa11
under a black magic spell that kept him
small. The woman had pleaded innocent.
Oraage
Weather
The mornings will be nothing to
write home about, but the week·
end afternoons will be pretty nice,
with sunshine and temperatures in
the low 70's along the coast.
INSWE TODt\Y
Apollo Commander Neil Arm· -;io
strong "pulled rank" to be first
man on the moon, SOJIS' foMM:r
NASA "voice" Poul Hancu. St1e
stor11 Page 1.
\
N
NiXon Vi sits
.Canada for
•
Seaway Rite
MASSENA. N.Y. !UPI) -Prealdint
Nixon joined Canadian Prime Minister
Pierre ElUott Trudeau at the border ~
day to commemorate the 10th an·
niversary of lhe St. Lawrence Seaway,
The two heads of state met at the
monument to international friendship on
the Robert A1oses·Robert JI. Saunders
Power Dam. One leg of the compaas
shaped monument Is ln the United Stites
and the other in Canada.
After meeting at the monument, Nixon
and Trudeau got into a sedan and drove
to the Dwight D. Eisenhower lock.
ThOU!ands were on hand to greel Nllon
and waving Canadian and American
flagg.
The Pre!ident flew by presidential
helicopter for his metUng with Trudeau
aft.er landln& in Air Force One at the
Plattsbw"gh, N.Y. AFB.
The two !ree world leadert ered.td
each other at the site where Queen
Eliubetb and Prealdent Elaenhowtr
dedictled a portion of the .uway 10
yun lfO.
Alter cortmoolal apeochn rededicaUn1
Ille Dwltlht D. EIHnhower lock, N1-
and Trudeau fkw to Monu.J for • tour
of "Man and Hil Werk!," IO lnlAnlatlo!W
expooltlon on IJie .ii. of Expo ~7 on De
Saint· Helene..
C.n>diln alflclal! blocked It all for the
d1y be<:lu>e al pouibk <lemonatntioll&.
Nllon lut uw Trudeau when the
pr1m1 mfnilttr vblted Washington M1ttb
24 and 25. He wu the first world leader
"' ....i with I.be oew Preoldent In
Wubiql<la.
Knowles Says
AMA Head W ant,s
Kin to Get Job
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (UPI) -Dr.
John H. Knowles, center of the Nixo~ ad-
ministration's fir sl internal political
• . 11torm, has charged that the head ol lhe
~ American Medical Assoc:iaUon (AMA)
wanb hiJ nephew to have the nation's
to~ health job lor which Knowles was
'originally slated for appointment.
(Earlier story, page 4).
Nenday, the Long Island newspaper,
quoted Knowlu as saying that the AMA
wu solely mponsible for stalling hi.a ap-
pointment to the post of uslstant
secretary of health, educaUon -ud
welfare. He said the AMA presJdeot,~. Dwf&ht Wilbur, "ist:amioua to, .. his
nephew tn the Job1'.:.:111e neplte•.JIJ>r.
Richard W!fbur, .., chalnnan of I.be
Calllomia Medical AssociaUon.
' y're afraid I'd be outgpoken and
Knowles told Newsday tn a telephone
Interview from his Swampscott, Mass .•
summer home, that the AMA leadership
wants ''the.ir own wat~dog on a lOJ!g
leash held tightly In Chicago (the AMA
h~rten: city)."
as ·the right questions ..• " he said. Such
questions, he added, would concern the
medical profession's resJ)onsibillty for
"skyrocketing docton' feea" and for 1 assuring the availability of good medical ~care regardless of finances. • ' f ! Two SA Markets
Hit by Bandits
Holdup men hil two market! In south
Santa Ana Thur&day night and early lhil
mornl.ng and got away wilb $815.
Ftnt to be struck at 9:27 p.m. waa the
Tic Toe Market at 1824 S. Standard Ave.
Two anned men confronted clerk Jerry
Mullins and demanded ca.sh. They got
~-A lone arrptd bandit held up night clerk
·Anthony OeGuido at the Thriftlmart, 1308
\\1• Edin(er Ave. at 2:20 a.m. He got
away with S215. Police did rmt believe lhe.
two holdups were connected .
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SP!CIAL TRAINING -lrlltructor Len Sc:hreiber shows Joe Lopez
(ce11ter) and Pblllp Pal*"'> how lo align whet! in special Oranfe
Coast eou.,e program for h!rb school dropouts.
Dropouts Get Delp
Paid to Attend Courses at OCC
A "°"p of high school dropo<Jts, trooblOI with &Olllsh. and m"'l of them
dlscjpllne problems aU, fl befni paid to folt they reaUy had no reason 14 try."
attend Orange Coast Col11ge. MOit of the young men were not "tum·
There the dropouts learn to become ed on" the first two week.!! of class. But
service stat1on mecbaniea and take a new when they actually began working on
interest 1n school, partly because they cars and trucks in the third week, m-
are being paid $1.80 an hour to learn. terest came quickly. ·
The 22 yoong men in the program who Faculty members brought their cars
wetl! referred by the Neighborhood Youth over to let the youths work on them.
Corps of Santa Ana have several things In They paid for the parts and the young
common: they have had discipline pro-men supplied the labor.
bltm1, dropped out of high Mihool, and Len Schreiber, the instructor for the
most are under 18 years old. course, ls as turned on with the program
Wages are being paid to the sludenls as the students.
w!Ut federal Manpower Defense Tra.ining "Working with these kids has been
Act fu!MU. The inltructors' salary ls paid fun," Schreiber said. "I really mean that.
by Oran&e Cout Junior College Di.strict. Once tbey got going, there was jus~ no
Thirty-two hours a week the fonner holding lbem bck."
dropout.I learn to do anylhlng on an Schreiber gees only one drawback -
automobile that can be done in a :service and It's not the fault of the studerits.
station· br•ke work, alignment whttl "We ~ turning out trained young balandn,, lube and oil cban&e~ mJnor men," be said, "capable of holding down
tuneups -you name it. a )ob wtlh any organlz.ation. But a good
When they have learned what they netd share of them are under 11 years of age.
to know -and mort. tmportanUy, when This makes it hard for them to fild a job,
some IUll .. !!:vlbeen cban~t and U they have to walt W:,~s or so.
tltey will bOJO 14-•t a jell ud II · .:l'm_ lfrald t1io.y•n tldll ** their old
-tlte coflqo IF(tlitm Ifni . l!Od\l' l,fiab1la.. • • ?I • •
needed jobs. For almost aU of ~. it ·' "lf people will '*'1y hi..0' lHem, !Jiey'fl
will be their fli-st gainful job, one whJch do a job for them'. And they'd like the
requires a still. With that comes a senae chance."
of. pride. How about hiring them? 1r someone
f at Emard, a taJI blonde from the San-does, will they stay on the job? According
ta Ana branch of the Neighborhood Youth to: Miu Emard, the statistics a~ow that
Corps, aeta an obvious satisfaction fnin theae. boys Jut longer OD the Job than
helping Uiele YOWll men 1et a start. others.
"We try tO teach them to have a sense "One reason Is that they have bttn
of re:sponslbili~ and good work hablt1 turned down so many times In the paat,
and attitudes,1'1 she: said. "Before they that when they do get a job, they value It
came here, moet of them had ab&olutely and Uiey keep it," she said. "They want a
DO motivalion. Some of them baje great Job badJy." . .
Senate Committee Okays
Bill on Oil Slick Liability
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate
public workr; subcommlttee. has approved
legislation to make ship owners and oil
drillers fully liable for the co.st of clean·
ing up oil slicks and 1pills.
Approval came Thursday, as Gov.
Reagan·s administraton announced In
Sacramenlo that it was proposing a
closer watch on offshore oil drilli"I in tbe
Santa Barbara Channel .
Couple Ma rri-es
On Annive rsar y
PORTLAND, Ore . (AP) -Mr. ond
1'-frs. Paul H. Thomas of Portland were
narried on their soth wedding an-
ni \'ersary.
They v.:.ere dh·orced about 44 years ago
and each married' acain. Their 1pouset'
died -her1 12 yearr; ago, hir; last !IUm·
mt1r.
Thty bec:ime reacquainted w h e n
Thomas tl'lephoned the ir only child, ri.trs.
R. J, OU"er, and hi6 former wife
anawered. On June 3 they flew to Reno,
and "'ere remarried.
A wedding reception Is planned Satur·
day, with four jT'andchildren and one
great grandchild to watch them cut the
'"tddin1 cake.
5800 Dian1ond Ring
Stolen at Pier 11
Somtone 11nagged an MOO di1mond rtnc
from Pier II , bul it w1m't one of thole
phenomenal finds In a fish's belly, Co.ta
Ates,, police said today.
Collegian Paulette Cox, 21 . of 1323 Ari·
lniton Ave., Anaheim, aakl someone ttole
that Item from her purse ullder a tlble In
the popular spot at 1976 Newport Blvd.,
while she was dancing.
The bill passed by the Senate sub-
committee is more atringent thf.O one
passed by the House last April. It would
place absolute liability for oil cleanup
cosls on any shipowners involved, with
three exceptions.
They would be during an act of war, a
negligent act by the government , or an
act or God.
The limit to be ~ged against a
vessel's owner would be $150 a gross ton
of the ship'& we ight.
The House bill provided that an owner
would be liable only in cases of
negligence and the liability would be $100
per ton ur to a maximum of $10 million .
Ha rbor Youths
Fly to Europe
Saturday night ISO teenagerB. 111 but 20
from the Harbor Area , will begin winging
their way on a 42-<Jay study tour of
Europe.
Eighth through 12th graders who paid
$996 each wUI be accompanied by I&
tearher chaperones. two nurses, four In-
structors, a principal and a vice prln·
clpal. Girb outnumber boys about thtte
to one.
The flrst-Ume program which may
become a yearly event is spoNOrtd by
Ne"11-port·Mesa Unified ScbOol District
and arranged through tht f'ort:ltn Study
League.
Studenls will travel · aero~• Europe In
five bust.s and 1pend eight days each at
uniYtrl!illles In London, Amsterdam,
Paris, Kitibuehl ( Ausltla) and Rome:.
The 20 students who aren't from
Newport-Meta schools come from school
dh1trlcte throughout tht county.
John Dean, Newport-Mesa schools c:ur~
riculum director, wUJ be prtnclJ)31 for Ute
trip, aod J11ck King. Harbor Hlch vice
principal will be 8S."iislant rrinclpal.
lnslruclors will be New po r l ·Me: s a
ttachers Marilyn Ellis, Carol Shcthaa,
Ronald Dahl ond John Mit<:htlf.
•
Tax Rehat'e Hit·s· Snag
,.
~ el CaUIOnla ~1"" ~ pi'OJed> auc:h ao~ World
may not 1et a '10 property ts:: rebate in·
fUaled by A*mbjyman Rober\ H. Burle
<Jl.HunUnaton Bfach) thll year. bat don"t
give up hope.
Despite the tact bit. bUI AB !i75 Is stall·
ed in the Senate Flitince Committee, the
70th District l•claJator sU11 holda out """° hope for Ila puaqt.
"I am pul'IUina every ana:te avail•ble to
get tht 1u re!W bolieffta for theae peo.
OCC Parking
Figures Just
Don't Add Up
Tm 1.100 Junior coffep &ludalts .,,.
rlvfnl 111111Uy on whetll, riw them onJ1
2,ia parkfnl apocto and you've IOI a
mad bunt for a pfoce 14 otop the buggy.
The" altuatfon fa aofnl 14 be a Utile bet·
ter nen fall at Orang:~ Coast Collese
wheo m additional parltlnl alots are ad-
ded. But not much. Because there'll be
700 additional atudenll, too.
Frank Hopkins, dean of research,
figures 50 percent of atudenta drive cars
to school. Usually on Monday, Wednesday
and Friday they're nearly all on campus
at once, he said.
The parking Jot will be constructed dur·
ing the gummer on a vacant field near
the agriculture building where. students
have grown grain.
Under an estimated $60,000 aintract,
the area will be graded for 632 spaces,
but only 371 be put Jn wlth paving and
striP:ing. To complete the rest will cost an
additional $37 ,500, and the jµnjo r college
just will have to walt unUI It has the
money, according to Finance Director
Correllan 'Ibompson.
He l!iald Jt is possible the rest of the
area could be oiled for parking.
San Joaquin
Trustees Okay
Schools' Budget
San Joaquin Elementary School
District trustees Thursday approved a
tentaUve 196•70 achools budget of about
14,975,000.
The 1prawllng district of 10 schools
serves the Saddleback Valley area in·
eluding Irvine, El Toro, and Mission Vie-
jo.
Busine1s superintendent Rex Ner~on
said the budget could increase the
general purpose tax rate 34 cents from
$1.35 to perhapn $1.69 per $100 aasesged
valualion.
The spending gchedule calls for the ex-
penditure of about '642 per student. Of.
ficlals predict an average daily at.
tendance of about 7,500 rtudenta through
the school year. The final budget will be
adopted ln August.
Glenn Ford Divorced
SANTA MONICA (AP) -Actress
Kathryn Hay1 has won a divorce from
actor Glenn Ford on a cruelty charge.
Ptfisa Hays, 33, said in her petition
granted Thursday that Ford, 52, ignored
her and showed no interest in her acting
cereer.
They were married, each for the se-
cond Ume, on March 27, 1966.
.•
pie," !lull!• -.14"""' la. -~:
He noled ~t Sen. Goori• Deutmajlan
(R·Lonr !l<a<hl bu also Introduced SB
saa, which la 1lmllar to hla measure &!Y-
ing cooperative homeowncir1 a f10 refund
this year and a f7M exemption nnt year.
"At that time, l'll try to have AB 57$
reconsidered," Burke added .
"I've been work.Ula very cloeely with
members of the Revenue and Ta11Uon
Committee and t.he Governor's office in
ltelpfni with I.be fonnulaUoa of the tu
' .,
,..,.,,. .,..Up," llul'te cOlltlnued.
"It's ari'ticipaltd that the tax refonn
leglalalion will be debated on the
Assembly noor ovtt the weekend so these
. meawes flllght i;,e. approved prior ta
budget adoption Monday," the Oranat
County lawmaker added.
"Even thougb AB 575 has been stalled
and resldents of cooperaUve housing wy
not get the $10 rebal.e," he concluded.
th loo of the lntmt ol the bUf In
onn pactqe will lnaurt the>e
I.be exemplioo ID flltur. y_ ...
Exeh••ce Stadeat
Newport Girl to Spend
Her Summer in Turkey
Harbor 1D1h Schoof student Lynn
Roaentr 1"day lo oo the first IOI of a
t0,000.mfle journey that will take her
behind the braded curtain 14 a cfly bear-
ing the proud Utfe ol the "jewel ol the
Near Eut."
Istanbul, Turkey, wUJ be the 1ummer
home of Lynn, 11, dau1hler of Mr. and
Mn. Joseph Roeener, W Via Venezia,
Newport Beach, and the American
Abroad program participant will be the
house guest of a Turkish family which
~akes ita borne Jn picturtsque Bakitkoy
-an Istanbul suburb situated oo lhe
western aide of the Bosporus.
She'll preface her Turkish delight with
two days' orientation in New York before
flying on to Rebert College in Istanbul.
There, at one of the oldest private col-
lege; In the world, she will undergo five
days or laniua1e training before joining
her Turkish "family."
LyM's summer "father" ls a teacher
of foreign langua1ea who will be on vaca·
tion for the duration of Lynn's visit. The
Newport girl'a hostess, Lynn un-
derstands, speaks no English.
Lynn is one d. 1,000 Ame rican students
who will a:pend summer abroad this year
under the auspices of the AFS exchange
program. She understands that she is the
only Harbor Area student' to be selected
for participation in the 1969 postings
abroad .
It will be Lynn's first visit to the land
of the Sultans but she is far from being a
stranger to the quaint customs and ex~Uc
surroundings she will encounter. And she
gives the credit to her pre-trip orientation
to Emgen Kepenek of Costa Mesa,
yo1:1ng Turk from Ankara who a:ttended
Harbor High under the same program sit
years ago and then rtturned to this coun·
try to marry a fonncr schoolmate.
Kepenek is currently studying in·
ternational markeUng in the United
States. He plans to take his wife, the
former Tina Duncan of Newport B.each,
back lo Turkey with him in the near
future.
DAILY l"tLOT lltll 1"1111'9
OFF TO ISTANBUL
Newport'• Rosener
' Lynn will be carrying the kno\vledge
derived !rom Kepenek's talks with her to
Turkey and she 'll also be carrying a !el·
ter from Mayor Doreen f\-1arshall or
Newport Beach to the mayor o!
Bakirkoy.
Lynn's mother, Judy, doesn't doubt
that Mayor1 Marshall's letter will be a
"big surprise" for the civic leader of the
Istanbul suburb. "She'll gel a shock when
she sees it's from a woman," she grin~.
"Aller all, women In Turkey are still
pretty much in the kitchen."
•Judy Gave All!J
James Mason Eulogizes Singer
NEW YORK <UPI) -Actor James
Mason eulogized Judy Garland today as
"the fuMlest girl in the world" who gave
more to her audJences and friends than
she rtctived in return. (Earlier story,
Page 5).
The eulogy, released an hour before the
funeral of the 47-year-o\d singer-actress,
praised ti.Ilsa Garland as "a perlOll who
gave richly both to her vast au·dlence and
her friends. but needed to be repaid ."
Her greatest gilt. he said, was the ablllty
"to sing so that it would break your
heart."
"She needed devotion and love beyond
the resources or any of us," Mason said
sadly.
More than 20,000 Garland fans passed
her bier at an east side funeral chapel
during the lying-in-state Thursday and
through the early hours of today. Her
hwband, Mjckey Deans, ordered the body
to remain on view continuously until
preparations for the 1 p.m. funeral began
at 11 a.m.
Six mourners \\'ere in line when the:
chapel doors were closed and they were
turned away, disapJXlinled .
Summer Safe --i
STARTS TUESDAY, JULY ht . I
I
Our An nual Sale will feature ma ny femous groups, from
such lines as DREXEL, HENREDON, HERITAGE. Also to be
included in the sal e er• ell of the upholst ery items in stoc k,
plu s spacial order upholstery mer.chand ise. at substanti al
sa vi ngs. Accenories , lamps and pictu res will be red uce d.
Don't hesit1te , •. come in and ma ke you r selection s now.
You will be pleasan tly surprised at th e I • r. g e variety of
qu ality furniture on diaphly now at rea l sa vi ngs.
Oraxol's sale merc ha ndise will be reduce d sta rtin9 Monday .
June 30th. '
WI Al l IO••Y POI ANY JNCOtiinNlllNCI c1ousn ,, THI C:ONSTI UCTtON WOi i ON WUTCLIFJ l llYI. tHlll IS
W Y AOClll & rAllJNa AT THI UAI OP OUl lfOll.
NIWl'O~T llACH
1727 W•tclllf Dr. 642-2050
ONM NllAT "l'IL t
ltr•t..ieMI IMerl.,
Dt1111M'1
Avellaba-..AJD-NSID
LAGUNA IU.CH 't "SSl
345 Norlll ~ HwY. • -
OnM •llDAY 'fll f
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AT RAINBOW'S END, ADORATION
Thousands Line Up for On• Last Glance
Goodbye to Stai·
T1wusands File Past Judy
NEW YORK (AP) -In dilion to a mass of formal
death as ii life, t b e floral tributes many mournen
magoeUsm of -Judy Garland brouiht their· own h<llqueta
continued undiminished today, and ))Meed them on the pews.
drawing thousands of ad· Many men carried single
miters through the nigbt ;and roses.
into the mominJ to file past Miss Garland was dressed in
her casket and bid goodbye. the silver lame wedding gown
"She 's found tha t rainbow in which she married Deans,
now," Mary Roberts, a 20-her filth husband, three
year~ld typist said quietly months ago. Silver slippers
after gazing on the eollin lined with silver buckles we r e on
with pale blue velvet "I hope her feet.
she's finally got some peace." A dozen feet !rom the coffin
They queued up for as long was a large wreath of peonies
as two hours in the gray, shaped like a rainbow -for
humid afternoon Thursday J udy's vocal signature, the
before enteritlg the chapel for haunting "Over the Rainbow."
a last brief glimpse of the 47-She first sang the song at
year-old actress who died Sun-the age of 17 in the movie
day in London of an accidental "Wizard of Oz." She played
overdose or sleeping pills. the role of a waif, Dorothy,
"People identified with that convinced that happiness lay
woman," said Marilyn Ford, just over the rainbow.
33, a Queeni housewife'"' In Jife, through her five
"Everyone"s g'Ot sad~ ·ana m.ttrtl'ges and a careei''that
problems, everyone gets Jone+ soared to great heights as well
Gly. Judy Garland made aJ! of as skirted the edge of show
us feel something tied her' and"' bwsiness oblivion, the rain·
us together." · how's end always seemed to
At the scheduled midnfght · elude" he~.
closing lhere were 3, O O O James Mason, who appeared
persons waiting outside the opposite Miss Garland in "A
Frank E. Campbell funeral Star is Born," flew in from
parlor on Madison Avenue at Geneva, Switzer 1 and . to
East 8lst Street, and Judy's deliver the eulogy. The Rev.
husband, Mickey Deans, asked Peter Delaney, who married
that the doors be kept open. Deans and Miss Garland, was
Deans, who found Judy dead to officiate at the private
In the bathroom of their services.
Chelsea cottage, ..,also asked Following t h e Episcopal
that mourners be allowed into will be buried in Ferncliff
the chapel until an hour and a funeral service, Miss Garland
hall before the private funeral Cemetery M a u s o I e u m ,
serviceatlp.m. Hartsdale, N.Y., in
Jn.side the fragrance of Westchester County just north
fiowers filled the air. In ad· of New York.
Liberals Say Nixon
Weakening Vote Law
WASHINGTON (UPI) •
President Nixon's plan for
changing the 1965 law intended
to ass ure souUwrn Negroes
the right to vote has been at-
tacked by House liberals as a
delaying action which would
weaken the law
The proposal would ea:tend
the voting MghtJ act to cover
all 50 stales instead of lhe
seven Scn!them states cur-
rently covered. It would ask
that literacy tests be ouUawed
as a qualification for voting
anywhere ln the country.
But the proposal drew
criticism from some liberals
who said it would dilute the
Goldberg:
Save Sirhan
NEW YORK (AP)
Former supreme Co u r t
Justice Arthur J. Goldberg has
wrillen Gov. Rooald R<qan
of Calif~rnla as~g com·
mutation of the death sentence
on Sirhan Bishara Sirhan,
assassin of Robert F. Ken·
nedy.
Noting that he himself had
been listed 1n Sirhan's disry as
a n assassinaUon prospect,
Goldberg said:
"The evolving standard.! of
decency that mark the pre>-
l™S or our society now con·
demn u barbaric afld in·
human the deliberate Jn-
1UtuUonalized t a II: I n f of
human We by the 11tate . •
original emphasis on the
South. One section that was
attacked would strike the re-
quirement the seven deep
South states get approval from
the U.S. District Court in
Washington or from the at-
torney genera! before they
change any of their local laws
allecUng voting.
Rep. Williom M. Mc:Culloch
(R-Ohio), one or the key
Republicans who will ~ draf-
ting the biTI, eonfll11led he was
among those who urged the
President to recommend •
simple extens.ion of the civil
rights Jaw rather than a
modification.
McCulloch sat in silence
Thursday as Atty. Gen. John
N. Mitchell outlined Nixon's
fl r o p o s e d modificaUons.
Liberal Democrat! and
Republicans on the committee
dismissed them one by one as
steps backward.
Aft.mvards the whlte.baired,
ruddy-faced Mt'CuJJOch. a
member of the President's
Co mmtsston on Civil
Disordm. ~Nixon'•
plan "a weaker TOting ria;bU
ad than an atenslon."
Meetings
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ANAHEIM
444 N. Euclid 535-8121
Mon . thru S•t.
10 •.m. to. 9:30 p.m .
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DAJLV Pll.01' 5
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SKINNY IS NEW, SKINNY
IS Now; THE BODY-HUG
•• f • • ..
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Long on cling , as leon as we've seen, it's the slimmest ·
slither of shirting you con weor this seoson. Pour yourself
into this knitty new length of Enk•lure®' nylon by Weber
ond close up tho look with fourteen tiny buttons. Red,
navy, blue, gold , wine, white or block, sizes 10-16, 11.00.
Moil and telephone orders invited.
Blouses, Shirts, 66.
•r.M. of Amoricon Enka Corp.
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NEWPORT HUNTINGTON BEACk •
47 F•shion Island 644-1212
Mon. thru Fri. I 0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. s.t. 10 o.m. to 6 p.m.
7777 Edinger Ava. a92.j33 I'
Mon. thru S.t.
I 0 •.m. to 9:30 p.m.
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• I DAR y ~.ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I
Tax Rate Stays Same
II would be aimple, on casual obaervaUon, to scoff
at the relati~Jy small amount N•wport Beach's City
Cowicil cut from the record 110.8 mUllon budgel In
three marathon meetings.
After hours of effort the council never really cut
anything out of the document, but instead transferred
the tota1 of a little cut from here and there into a badly·
needed street and alley improvement fund.
The heavy cutting-and substantial chunks at that-
was done even before the councilmen officiaHy scanned
the budget.
And some of the cuts hurt.
During budget conferences with department heads
City Manager Harvey Hurlburt lopp~ off a tota~ of ~1 .2
million and one of the areas hard hit was capital 1m·
provenlents -badly needed projects. some of th~m,
which will have to wait until later years for accomplish·
ment.
Tbey wiU cost more then.
Hurlburt has stressed that these reductions have
made the budget a "bare.bones version" that will result
in "minimum service consistent with the quality of the
city."
Deterioration of city facilities is becoming a ~row·
ing spectre in Newport Beach, hence the council de·
cision to shift the cut funds into street and alley work.
That issue, as in all city services, is costing more
and more as the months go by.
In fact, J?:Tice estimates for a job approved today
have to be hiked 10 to 20 percent just to allow for the
increased cost between planning a project and actually
doing it perhaps a year later. .
Primarily because of the capital improvement prob-
Jem city aides have SU8.~ested that councilmen take
a gOod, hard Jook at a utility user's t~x ~h~t would .add
nearly a haJf-million dollars to the city s income in a
one.year period.
Dirty Joke
Has All But
Disappeared
A colleague In lhe news room sent me a
brief lnter~ffice memo not long ago :
"The dirty joke has all but disappeared. I lt1dom bear one. Two years ago, I en•
countered a couple a week, maybe more.
I.,.stpl meet the same guys with the same
CnciUency. No, no jokes."
This has been my experience, tao, and I
am glad. Not because I object to ~irty
J9ka per se, but because not one 1n a 11.uidred was truly funny -but you felt
yod had to laugh (at least weakly) to
demonstrate your virility and good
feUi}rshlp.
I think the rapid increase iii sexual
permi.ssivenesa in the U.S. the last few
)'ears bas killed off the dirty joke. A dirty
joke Is basically a "reaction-fonnatlon·•
to sezual repressiveness in a society; it
ls not a normal outlet for humor.
MANY SOCIETIES have not had any
dirty jokes. and would not understand or
apPreciate them -not because these
cultures are puritanical, but quite the op-
posite, because they are permissive in
li.e area of se1, and find it in·
comprehensible that we smirk and snig-
ger about a subject that to them is as
simple and natural and obvious as
bre.athing.
ll is no accident that in Denmark last
)'Ml', when all censcrship of pornograph-
ic material was lifted, sale of pornogra·
pftic literature on newsstands dropped al-
moat to the vanishing point.
IN HIS RECENT book. '·Rationale of
the Dirty Joke ," G. Legman points out
that "The almost total prohibiUvenw of
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Can we exp6Ct "toot.hpa11te ad"
smiles at Newport Beach City Hill
now that the city employes will
have free dental care~
-M. J. S.
n.1t l••lw"' "'r1K1'1 ,..._., .,....., ""
ftKnurUy "''" ... tlll M.....,. lelltl r•ur , ... -v• ,. GIM111r o.., Dlllr l'll•t.
our culture toward the three primary Im-
pulses of the newborn and arowlnc child
-the oral, anal and 1enttal in that order
-contrasts worse than ~t anything
else about us \vith "tbe to t a I
permissiveness, in rea:ard to tbeae same
impulses in children, in more advanced
societies, such "s the natives of
Okinawa.? ·
It may sOund 1tran1e to our ears to
hear Okinawa cited as a "more ad··
vanced" country than ours, but It is part
ol our national pride and prejudice to
believe that because we have attained the
highest level of teclinicaJ and materisl
accompliahment lo the world , that
therefore we are 1imilarly superior in our
llOClal, tlhJca1 and 11e1111l allltud.,. •
A JOU 18 cenerally a form of.anxiety-
releue, and aomeUma it ii a useful and
necesuJ'J' form , as when IOlditrl jest
before batlle. But the dirty joke indicates
the amount of repressed anxiety about
sex In our society ; itj,s 1 mart of psy.cbic
slavery, not of freeci>m.
Our shifting sexual standards will no
doubt drtft too far into laxity hllore they
are corrected, but I beHeve the aeneral
tendency iJ a healthy one, and that out of
the chaos and confuaion t~e will come a
more realistic and more humane C1H1·
ception of sexuality in our society than
""e ha,·e yet permitted ouraelve1 to Im·
agine -except through the distorted and
distorting medium of the dirty joke.
Elders Have Job to Do
Excerpts f rom a statement by \Vib
liam K. Coblentz of San Francisco, a
member of the University of Ca.lifor·
nla Board of Regents, a.s publishtd in
the June 16 iss ue of University Bui·
lttin:
"We elder s have a job to do in fulfilling
our obligations of public trust. We cannot
wait for the young to accept without
question our idea s and our policies for
time is running against us. \\'e cannot
really try to ,outw it or out mantu\'er
them because if we do a new generation
will appear and take their place trained
by tbost we have terrporarily out~itted.
U we declare war. \'erbally or through
tactics of repression. society in man~
qpecb far beyond the unh'ersity campus
ts affected.
0 1 PLEAD FOR understanding on bo\h
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·': ~~est rtepor:i , . • 4· \_L ·~· -'·
sides or the s!:nerat!on gull. The young
sh-Ould try to understand that mcsl of us
want to im prove 15ociety, not to destroy it
in the transparently unlikely hope of
making it better by makin& it worse. \Ve
elders have to under11land th e
rrsllessness and rerment combined with
idealism among many of the young.
-"There are probably as ma n y
misdirected elders as young people !nd
as many virtuous ones ln both camps. It
"'ould be folly to igno re the motl11ations
of those , bent on confrontation for con·
fronlation's sake. fl would be equally Ir-
responsible if we did not recognize 1ood
faith when it is evident.''
.--------B11 Geot'ge --------.
.,,. 'Dear George:
You're always poking fun at ad·
" "•"vice oolumnim. Doesn't this make
. other edvice columni!LS angry and
'mri'l you worr ied?
.... BS.
•~ ,; Drar B.S.:
How ln lhe workt do yOU think ad· 1; ... Ylc< columlli.U would find °"' ( f .<\' --maklnc fun o! U!tm! You don 'I
• "'· .thfnt 111 adfice columnltt.a actually
" read th<I< Ullng1, do you~
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Min who is In the Marines. He uys
he lost hill la.at month'a pay gambl·
Ing in a game of pok@r •Ith Marine
noncoms. Are '-farinc noncoms
allo"'·td to gamble with rookies~
E.A. Dear E.A,:
\\'hen ,.tarine noncoms play
JX)ker with boot.I, Ibey aren ·1
1ambllni.
(Send your most puzzling pro-
blenu to George -they help him
pau the lime in hb maximue>-
aecwity ward.) .
I
Even II !bat tax were lmplemenled, boweve;, the capllal bn~rovement budaet will be shorter by $300,000
than wlial lhe i:lly •WI liad originally recoriunendeil.
One shouldn't, then,. be misled by hearing of only
~.ooo in budget cuts.
City employes receiv"!S $400,000 in new in~urance
benefits and raises, and city departments received at
ieast some increased funds to cope with higher costs.
, •• And the property tax rate stayed the same.
Narcotics Arrests Soar
"We're riding lhe crest of a wave right now with
narcotics use in Newport Beach, and it's only intuition,
but J foresee a steady decline in ita use here and else-
where," Newport Police Chlef James Glavas told New·
port Beach city councilmen recently.
And if the figures bis department compiled this
week are any indication, never has a drop in narcotics
use been needed more.
Arrests so far this year have soared over the rate
for the same time last year, and the summer season,
when the larger transient traffic brings with it its as·
sortment of dope, hasn't arrived yet.
The largest incuase in arrests wa.s in the juvenile
narcotics area -up 105 percent.
The arrest totals reflect more the aggressive en~
forcement of narcotics laws than increased use, Glavas
said.
"We take great pride in being a tough town when
it comes to narcotics," he said.
Let us hope that the chief is right -that the ar·
rest statistics do mean only that his men are practicing
aggressive enforcement.
What's more, let us hope that hi s intuition is correct
and the wave does subside -rapidly.
'Free press{ Man, we don't even believe irtfree speech!'
(N)
When President Johnso 11 Halted Bonabing • • •
Three-point 'Understanding' Existed
WASHINGTON The N I 1 o n
Admlnl11tration has informed C&naress
that a three-point "underatandina" with
North Vietnam did extst, unwritten but
.,uite explicit, when President Johnson
halted the bombing of the North last
October.
The Secretary of Defense, Melvin R.
Laird, gave that unequivocal assurance
In closed-door testimony late in March.
Laird said the under11t.anding was one •of
the ground rules in existence when he io-
ok over the Pentagon a monlh earlier.
The secretary said he had discussed the
matter personally wilh his Johnson
Administration predecessor, Clark Clif-
ford. He testified that he had alao talked
about it with Cyrus Vance, the John-1 AdminlstraUon 's number two negoUatOr
al the Paris peace talks.
LAIRD SAID Vance told him there was
an understanding that. if the bomblna or
North Vietnam were halted, "three basic
points " would be followed :
-No operations carried on by North
Vietnam through the demllitarized zone,
the DMZ.
-Major population centers In South.
Vietnam wouJd not be "indiscriminately"
attacked with rocketa or bombs.
T.. .., "'-.
A;lfe ..Ooldsn1ith
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South Vietnamese government
spokesmen would be assured a voice in
the Paris peace talks.
Laird stressed that the understanding
wu "not in writing." He left no doubt,
however, that such an understanding had
been entered into with the Nort h Viet·
namese.
The secretary is also reported to have
outlined just bow. as be understands it,
the arrangement came into being.
VANCE, TOO -After Laird's
testimony. and perhaps as a resull or
hearing about the secretary's flat and
positive statements about the previously
speculative understanding. members of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
began asking questions.
Flnally, Chairman J. Wl!Jiam Jo"ul-
bright D-Ark .. asked the State Depart·
~ent for information on the reported
Understanding. Apparently the Nixon
S'ale Department enlisted the help of
Johnson negotiator, Vance, to elaborate
on the touchy matter.
In any event, Vane~ came to
\Vashington from his New York City
headquarters on ri.1ay 15th. He discussed
the under standing, at some length. with
Fulbright and some of his colleagues in
Fulbright's private office.
The substance of the under~tanding, as
Vance then outlined it. was just as Laird
had described it: No DMZ attacks, oo in-
discrim inate shelling of cities, and SouU1
Vietnamese spokesmen would have a role
in substar.tive talks in Paris.
NO VERBAT~1 transcript was taken
n[ Vance'!> statements in Fulbright 's of-
fice. though a memo was prepared later
fron1 notes. Laird was testifying on the
rec.'Qrd, however , and a declassified
version of his remarks will presumably
be niade public In due course.
Thal rr.ay well produce some (lap, bolh \
here and in Paris. • '-
Arter the bombing halt , o( course, the
rocket attacks on South Vietnam popula·
lion centers were resumed. There were,
according to U.S. commanders, repeated
violations of the demilitarized zone by the
North Vietnamese.
Therefore, Laird 's forthright ctimments
will almost certainly be challenged by the
Communist side In Paris, and the et·
istence of any understanding at all,
denied vehemen tly there.
JIERE L~ THE United States. publica·
lion of La ird 's statements will lend itself
to a different sort of controversy. It may
well contribute lo the already mounting
criticism of President Nixon by the usual
anti·war critics and by others.
Vance's former boss, Ambassador
Averell Harriman, has already joined in
that criticism . Others, especially th•
Democr;::tic "~oves" in Congress are get·
ting ready to do so vigorously now that
President Nixon has called them the new
isolationists.
Th~y will have a new i!Dd open avenut
(or thi1r complaint! wheri· it ~ ofticiaUY
• confirmed that there was, in the dying
dayS of the Johnson Administration, an
understanding with the Communist .side
,iiut regard to a certain de-escalation o!
the fighting.
Critics will surely dismiss the Pentagon
claim, that the North Vietnamese retired
only to regroup for an attack again this
spring. They wiU be asking why Nixon.
like Johnson, has been unable to expand
and broaden the underrtanding reached
last fall.
Confused Concept of What Guilt Is
By GEORGE R. HOFF, Ph.D.
Much or our behavior Is based upon a
confused concept of what cuilt is, and
what it means. We've learned to feel
ruilty when we violate moral, ethical or
religious principles ; and we're motivated
to do the right thing in crder not to fetJ
guilt. When we do the right thing, we feel
guilt·free and this improves our self·
esteem .
But being intelligent, we often use this
concept of guilt self·protecllvely, by mak·
ing it work !or w and against others. We
turn it into a •·s ec u r It y shield"
which protects us and helps make sense
out of our otherwise. perple1lng conduct.
WE SHIELD ourselves by disavowing
responsibility for our t.ctions and, in·
stead, blame our conscience, supere50,
value system, sense of right and wrong.
etc. For example, to say "I won't cheat
on my spouse because I'll feel guilty
about doing it," implie.s that It is our
~Ill, rather than ounelvn, which makes
the decision to remain fait hlul.
tntert'sUngly, institutions such as the
government. church. and education hr-Jp
perpetuate the delusion that it is '>ad
behavior that is "'rong, not us . \\lii::t
must be remen1bered is that institutions,
per sc. are concerned with their prin·
ciples mora U1an with the people they
rtpresent. When a church. for exampl..:,
Insists that Its mtmbers act according to
certain prescribed rules, it infers that the
person who is behaving is less Important
than the !>ehavior.
AND IT FOLLOWS that if a pC!r90n
uses a church -or aome other lnsUtutlon
-•S the final authority which..,dis~"i.
truth for a price, he buys guilt In ordtr to
Quotes
A•femblyma• Floyd Wakefield, Run·
tln&ift Park -"Tho&e who sell
dangerous dn11s to a minor, or anyone
tlse, are In the c1t,101')' o( one "ho
would murder, mid sbou1d be made to
pay for tbtlr crime."
(~--:· .,..... ..... .
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i E've,ryday
1. •' '{..' .. Prohlen1s
I· I '• ' ' ~:.:&....
avoid feeling it.
,
Real guilt is not based upon whal wr
have done wrong. Wrong action produces
feelings of ~bame. Real guilt stems from
a feeling of\ not having done enough ; il
belongs to the unfulfilled wish. not the 8{-
lion. However, contrar .. to what Jesus
said, we tend to place more value on ac·
llon than upon lntention.
THf: NEUROTIC uses guilt lo evade
action. The psychologically healthy per·
son realizes his guilt "-'hen he hasn 't act.ed
according to his true and total inner al·
titudes and intentions. The neurotic uses
irresponsi bility as an excuse; the healthy
person is guilty when he is irresponsible.
It may be seen, therefore, that real
guill is part ol everyone's character
structure ; it cannot be avoided. We are
all guilty because none of us has t'Yer
done enough in every situation: we
haven't fulfilled our intentions or potea·
lial. Part'nthetically. shame is also an
clement of our character makeup,
because everyone has done 50methini;
wrong acco rding to our, or someone
cl!;;e·s. standards.
ACCEPTING REAL guilt and shame
helps to remind us of our humanness and
to live with our deficiencies. Not ac·
cepting them may lead to the defensi\'e
use of neurotic guilt to feed the delusion
that actions are more important than in-
tentions. Real guilt is not a problem ;
ncurolic guilt is.
In fact,' real guilt is beneficial because
il helps ,keep us honest with ourselves.
Neurotic guilt. on the other hand, is self·
deceptive and self·defcating. and detracts
us from knowing oursel11es.
Each of us must distinguish our real
from our neurotic feelings of guilt.
Sometimes professional help is required
to untangle :he web of feelings, but oftf'n
a reall.tation oI differences between lhem·
can help us live. with ourselves .nore
peacefully.
Opposes Upper Bay Land Swap
To the Editor :
One thing about the Upper Newport
Bay land exchange that not vrry many
people understand is 1vhat they are get-
ting in their 450 county acres whose ap·
praised value is $19 million. Two hundred
scvent1•-six of these acres (60 .percent ),
valued at $14 million, arr 15 a rondltion
of lhe trade to be dredged to a depth of
JO reel . We aren't getting land at all.
Fourteen of our $19 n1illion are non·cx-
istent at the close cf the trade.
BY CONTRA~. all or the Irvine Com·
pany·s 157 acres are there and prime
waterfront property as well, worth not
less than $100 mlllion after the trade. In
addition. 120 of the county's acres are nril
on the waterfront and unnecessary for
the development of a bay. We are left
with 54 acres at the muddy reRr of the
bay where swimn1ing would be poor and
tla nd for the propo~ beach would hal'e
to be imported and renewed as ii washetl
away.
IF THE PROPOSED penlnsuh1 11hould
prove to be infeaslble from an englnetr·
in1 point of vlf:w. lhe public is !tit with
approximately 30 acres of undesirable
real estate. This b not ln my optnion
•orth tht destruction of 1 beautiful bay
by dr<dslng and fllllng, poor plllll1ing,
Mailbox
Letters Jrom readtri are welcomt .
Normally wrif,ers slto11ld convey their
niessages in 300 words or less. The
right to conde11se letters to fit space_
or eliminate libel is re.!eroed . .A.II lei.-
ters must include signat11rc and mail·
ing addre.!.!, but 'l"lames may be wilh·
held on request if sufficient rea.son
is apparent.
lPck of foresight and neglect of lhe fart
that water resources Ii.kt thil are a rarity
in Southern California.
MRS. CARL W. COTMAN
ffl11•l1a1c'& Slntement
To lhe Editor :
111an1ts · for fhe piubllclty on the front
f)81t of the DAILY PlLOT concerning the
meeting of CHART In ':olta Mesa. lt WIS
very good to re1d the statement by
Andrew Hinshaw, that the appraisal for
asseumtnt on the land wq obviously a
directed appraisal .
I owe Ulb letter to you, tor I wrote
before. commenting that t felt we were
not getting the coverage we should.
I think ll-1rs. Frank Robinson or
Newport Beach is indeed a plucky person.
She and l\1r, Robinson apparently ar!
having to fight !he lr11ine Company, the
Board of Supervisors and the. State Lands
Commission in this unholy land exchange .
FERN ZIMMERMAN
-----
Friday, June 'rl, 1969
Tht tditorict page of the Dail#
Pilot sttks «o inform o:nd atim-
ulatt rtoders bu presenting this
newspaper's opi11ioM o:nd co~
n1e1uarv 011 top ic.s of biterest
rutd significance, bu providing •
for~m. for the rxprcssiori of
our rcadcrt' opinlon1, and bt1
presenting the diverse vie-w-
points of informed observers
a.nd apokt:tmt:n on topfe.t of Che
da~.
Robert N. Weed , Publisher
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BEA ANDIRSON, Editor
PrMer. """" U. 1• M , .. 11
·Play Planne·rs
Se.ek Scenar ·io
,
-I
Musical visions of Pilgrims, pumpkins and 'lbanksgl'v!ng turlcey
already are dapcillg through the b .. ds of officers of Cblldrin's Theater
Guild of !fewpo(l ,Harbor. · ,
Poring over Ideas for their Thanksgiving weekend. musical production
will be the main summer task for the group,. now beglnnlng lheir nlnlh
year.
The announcement will be made in July of the chosen'plaY,'s natl)O,
director and audition dates, according to Mrs. James Dowty, production
coordinator. • ~ ·
Mrs. Walter H. White bas ·taken ovor the duties of presidedf ftoai
Mrs. Ladislaw. Reday at an· installation luncheon, saying that the ~oels of•
Theater Guild are to "provide good theater for children through ouf pro-
ductions and offer creative dramatics to children through our profeHlona1 ·
workshops."
Looking ahead to September, Mrs. Carl Nelsser, vice president In,
charge of programs, is planning a polpouri; of songs and scenes · from'
more than 10 plays to entertain members at their first fall gathering. ' . . .~ ' .
Original music and lyrics by Mrs. RaJph, Tandowsky ll!'d Mrs. Rialph
Holden will be featured.
Yearly activities of the Guild also feature a spring play and·a tour·
ing troupe which plays to exceptional children in schools and hospitals
throughout Orange Coo_nty .
JACK FROST SETTLES ON PUMPKIN -A top level script con-
ference takes place in the home of Mrs. Walter H. White (center),
newly installed president of Children's '!beater Guild of NeWport
Barbor. Exchanging ideas for just the right play to present over
the Thanksgiving weekend ar:e (left) Mrs. Carl-~eisser, new .vJce
president In charge of programs and.( right) Mrs. James Dowty,
Other new ofticers include the Mmes. Franklin Goodenough, work•
shop coordinator; fµchard Reineman, recording secretary; Mark Mat.
thews, corresponding Secretary; stuar:t Wilson, treasurer; Reday, part.ta..
mentarian; llofl Paul, production coordinator II; David Skilling. worlssbop
registrar; James Macy, community relationi;, John Kerr,. memberahip, production coordinator. i .,,. ..
Blasting Off Into Orbit Around the Moon
Blasting off to reach Ille moon of their goals,. that
is, are ~ta Mesa Art League officers. They aim
high In plan to raise funds through exhibits for
scholarship programs and the new art gallery build·
ing.funds. Protecting her.ear drtllllll is Mn. Grayson
McCarty (left), first vice president of the league.
Mrs. Carey Cowan (center), group president, holds
lighted fuse while Mrs. Hans Linhardt, second vice
president. boosts aloft the art league Apollo aiming
it for flight into 1969-70 season.
, and Jamee Harris, publicity.
Graduate Wi th Scholarsh ips in Han d
Pictured 'on· the· Orange Coast College campus are
three of the four~Young women graduatei: who have
been awarded scholarships by the Assistance League
of Newport Beach. '!be winners are (left to right)
Donna Kinyone, Jeanriie Sturdevant and Carolyn
Foss. '!be ~rib.recipient Is Debra Toner. All tlie'.
girls, ~re from Coeta Mesa. '!be Assistance Learu1 schol,ar~hipa:, each iri the amoJJnt of $500 .Are'° award~
ed annually to worthy area students as one of. the 1 many community services of the League. , 1 -
No Smoke or Fire Needed to Get Grape Vin.e Tangled ~P -:
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband
and I have been married 21 years. We
ha\re a wide circle of friendt and have
dooe a good Jab of raising three "l'lendid
children. I YFOUid say our marriage ta bet·
ter than most.
About four monlhs·ago I received three
telephone calla from friendl who •anted
me to know' they were so 10rry to hear
that Fred aod I are gelUng a dlvom.
Fred received two such calls at his place
or butiness. Neither of us can figure out
who stort<d the story.
Yestmta1 I received another such call.
Appa...Uy the rumor ha stort<d again.
Ia there any WIY we c1n trace these
complet<ly Jalae stories! Why l1art
them? Why? -WONDERMENT
ANN LANDERS [il
DEAR WON: Doo~ ...-,.ar time
ud nerp tryil& l.e &rack don nmon:.
ll't f1tUe 1 mrewardtl11 fru1tnllq ud
polnlitH.
Wht 1tlrb: tltem! It coakl be aaybody.
Wll7? EllYy proballly.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: We adore our
foor grandchlldttn. My husbsnd ts com-
pletel7 d<~oted to them, especially the
lwo lltlla boys. G ndpa has been Iii<• 1
father to them .• mother considers It
a blessing since their own rather wu
never vert allenl,J'ie to his young family.
' Now that lbt Children are gelling more
articulate it ls apparent lhal they kwe
Grandpa. very ch. 'J'hetr own la~
hu dedded this ~ve la "unhealthy"
because Grandpa ls setting old {he'1 80)
and he may die oae of lhese daya. AC·
cordina to their rather, the children· ,.111
11uffe.r severe emotional trauma unJesi
they diminish cont.ct with .!he• old
gentleman. He wants.to "spare them" by·
lim!Ung Grandpa'• v<s to onoe ..,.ry
f.en days. I
ts our a.In-law right? 1r you SI)' .,
we wru accept tJtil decision. :... SAD
DEAR SAD: y·, • mat accept tltelt
declsltl M mallet whit J 11y. Th
wldttt of the pal'eltl mast prev1ll1 not
111ote of die 1ru<tpa,.,.u •r of """ Llndtn.
II 11'1 my optaleo ,_ -~ k1< 11 ~'
The ktve chlldrel pl rrom 1 Crud,. Is
1 ipeclll kled ti love. ftelr f1lber Roald
be l"'t<lol for It. I ooopect ,_ ....,._
low rtt<llio die llfltelloa ~ clllldm lt<l
for Gl'llllpo. Bow u1...-1e tllal ..
~-,. u competllleo ~ ol
u ,adiled •1111euloo. 'Ii Ille .... "' 1111 ~)
DEAR ANN: ~ pareola who~··
eel their 1$-ye•rold .... lo enterlliln hll
glrllrlend In hio lied"""' for th"''houn
belono dinner (with ll>i 'doo!r-doaedt and
then ellowed them to return lo the
IH!droom after dinner muat be nuts.
Don't parenil realise that today ·, 14-
year-okt kkl knom more about RX thin
his ,,.rentl knew •l 207 w~ my brother
was ii be explained to Mom and Dad
wh1l llam01U111io ..... and bow they gol
thet woy. They ... ,. SHOCKED.
Tell parenio lo gd with It, Ann. Lui
' . :veer too of "lY sirllriendo ho<t 1~
In Europa and one . neor1y. d!ell •-.. ,qe tried lo •borl hen<ll. They ..... alt
11 and from ...caJ!ed "betltt famllleet'
-D. TROIT ,
DEAR TROIT: I .... t -jo, toll
·-v .. dtd. hi pod. ~
• ·Do iOO f!<l ill at ....... OU\ pl ltt'!a
everybody having a good Ume but' )'OU!'
Write tor Ann Landen' booklet, "The,
Key To Populorily." eaclollnl with )'OUr
r<qu .. 1 :Ill etnlo In coin ml' a 'loai, ielf.
addmRd,1tamP<CftllVtlopt. •
AM Landen will be &tad 1o bolp ~
with your P,nll>1-. Send tlltm lo,11,r lo
''"' ol the DAILY PILOT, ....... a stamped, stll·addmpeo\ ..,..""-
. ,.
I
I
I
I
J4 D.111.V mOT F~day, .lvftt '27, 1'169
Candlelight Ceremony • . ,
Marriage Vows Taken
Bt(ore an alt.Ir banked with
a fan lhaped arrangement of
atadJoU and white c h i n a
chrysanthemums and flanked
by double tiertld candelabra,
Kartn Lynn Kraft e1c.hangrd
wedd~ VOWS with John
Charles Washington Jr.
'I1le Rev. Richa rd Buteh of·
ficlated during the double ring
ceremony In St. Paul'1 Episc-
opal Church, Tustin for the
daughter of the Louis E.
Krafta of Santa Ana and the
son of the John C.
Washingtoru: of New port
Beach.
F1ower girl Tracy Hartung,
the bridegroom's niece, scat·
tered flower pelals in the
bride's path as she was
eSCCJrted to the altar by her
father .
candlelight aatin and chan-
tilly lact fashioned her bridal
gown. with the lace bodice
featuring Jong sleeves and
pleated trim. Tiny satin CilVer-
ed buttons matched the full
satin skirt, which swept into a
cha~) train. A Juliet cap of
chantllly lace held her three
tiered· elbow length veil of silk
lllU!ion, and she carried 'a col·
onlal bouquet of white roses
and lilies of the valley.
Matron of honor M r s .
Charles A. White and maid of
honor Miss Frances Jones
were gowned in posy pink taf-
feta belted at the waist, wilh
1 ruffied trim at the neckline
and full length sleeves. A pink
,., 'fhf '1 bow headplea! caught their
short pink Illusion veils and
-11 they carried three tong stem· w:.:.;~:::..:-..:..,;,__ med red roses.
''""'' '"'
19 Dressed in aimil&r outfits
MRS, JOHN CHARLES WASHll\IGTON JR, and carrying one long stem-
Monterey Penln1ule· Honeymoon m e d r o s e w e r e t h e bridesmaids, Mrs. Lawrence
Bomar, Mis• Gall Hudgins and
Miss Julie Gronemeyer.
,
0
4 Gregory T. Thornton was
j best man. Christopher R. '~~ Kraft, the bride's mother,
~ headed the ushers who in·
~ eluded Kurt Dykema, Har-
" _j rlson D. Breyer, James
IA Munselle and Geoff Thompson.
l Approximately 350 guests
a'ttended a reception i n
Orange, where Mrs. James
I Klug was in charge of giltS
and Mrs. Ronald P a y n e
circulated the guest book. Also
assisting were the bride's
coua.ln from San Diego, M..isa;
Victoria Beehler, the
brldecrvom's COll!ln f1'm Fort
Lauderdale Mia Gretchen w.,.,,., and Ml8s Pol Harvey
of Santa Ana.
Special guOl!s incl'!'led Mr.
and Mrs . Joseph
M.Washlngton, the
b r idegroG\11'1 grandparents
from Or191t1 Mn. Russell
Woldlter, dhls grandmother
from Tusttit and Mr. and Mrt.
Robert Lewis ol Las Vegu,
The biille was gi'ad48ted
from Foolhlll High Scl>ool In-
Santa Ana' and attended
Cattfornla State College at
Fullerton. Her new husband
al!o Is a Foothill High
graduate and attended Arizona
State University. 'He Is
presenUy studying 1t Orange
Coast College where be la af·
filiated with Zeta Beta Tau.
The couple plan to make
their home In Santa An.I upon
,,f
MRS, STEVEN LOUIS PARLATO
St. Andrew's Nuptials
--~ their return from a wedding
trip to Monterey and Carmel.
Bellflower
Graduates
Recruited
Victoria Griffith Now
Mrs. Steven L. Parlato
An e v e n I n g candlelight
ceremony united in marriage
the fonner Victoria Lynn Grif·
fith, daughter of the John D.
Griffiths <lf Newport Beach,
and Steven Louis Parlato, son
<lf the L<luis Parlatos of
1'-1assapequa, N.Y.
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church was the y;edding set·
ting and the Rev. Dr. Charles
H. Dierenlleld was the of·
ficlant.
Following the double ring
nuptials the newlyweds were
honored during a reception in
the Irvine Coast Country Club,
SUsan Dahlberg. cousi n of the
bride from liuntlngton Beach,
circulated the gue sl book
among 100 friend! and
relallves.
The bride selected a wh ite
organza empire style gown
with a "'aUcau cathedral
length traJn beginning at the
shoulder. A short full veil was
cauaht to a wide jeweled headband and She ~uried a
cucadlng bouquet of lilies of
the vllley, otephanotis, pink
l'OlleSond fern,
MJJ. Kartn Gr~nth Frank,
-cl the brldo from Costa
NB Auxiliary
Newport llUch Police Aux·
l!lary ,.tbtn tllo Jut Tuesd•Y
of lhe inontll ot T:'° p.m. 1 ....
aUon Is 'vlllablt with Mro,
Robert 1ft'ail•-.... 112t.
I •
Mesa, was matron <lf honor
and M. EUiabeth O'Neill of
Vancouve.r was maid or honor.
Bridesmaids were C a r o l
Parsons of Santa Fe and Nan-cy Parlato, the bridegroom's
sister. They donned floor
length A..Jine gowns of faille in
pastel shades of g r e e n ,
lavender. blue and yellow.
Lace trimmed their Edwat·
dian sleeves and l!imall flowtrs
made up the headpiece.!.
Multicolored roses, b a b y ' s
breath and fern were selected
for their bouquets.
The beneclict rusked J oseph
Zwl Zwaigenberg from Tel
Aviv to stand as best man.
Ushering were D\vight John
Griffilh, the brlde'i. brother,
Lorne Mallin of Vancouver
and Lynn Phillips of
Pa.saden.a. Blatn1r W I I I l a m
Frand, nephew of the bride ,
was ring bearer.
Among special guests was
Barbara Flagg of Rivenlde.
'IM: new Mrs. Parlato at-
tend<d Springfield College,
Massachusetts, and t b e
UnJvenity of Ca 11 for n i a,
Riverside as a philolophy ma·
jor.
Her husband was a student
al Spring!leld College, Bard
Co11ere i n AnnandalHn-
Hudlot'I. N. Y. and University
of Munich.
FQllowlng a wedding trip to
San Franclaco the couple will
mike their home ne11r Bard
Colltge whtrt the brldt(room
la W'llln1 his BA 1n literature.
Tuesday. July 1, will be lhe
deadline to purchase tickets
for the reunion of 1959
graduates of Bellflower High
School.
Planning the buffet dinner
which will begin at 7 p.m.
Saturday, July 19, are Mrs.
Albert (Janice Meech an )
Ramirez, ~71 and Mrs.
Jeff ( Robert 1 Armstrong) •
Minkler, 842-2497, who may be
contacted ror reservalioos or
additional information.
Country Club
Dence Draws
lone Pa rents
Taking to the dance floor al
Costa li1esa Goll and Country
Club tomorrow evening will be
members and guests o f
Parents Without Partnen,
CranR:e. Coast Chapter.
The dance will be pttteded
by 1 cocktail hour at 8 p.m.
eo.cllalrmen for the e\·ei,t are
Mrs. Mary Henry ol Newport
Beach IJ'ld Xi':nnelh Edwards
ol Tustin,
Single parents ire lnvlltd. to
conl:lcl lt1t1. Joan Gardner ,
133-1121, 11.r lnfonnatlo!\ about
the rtu1rter, whlc:h also 11
r.lannlng a panc111kt b.-t11kf,-,;\
n Costa Mea111 City Pat'k en
Sunday. JurA 21, from t 4'.m.
to noon.
• -. ,
•
' • ' ,, '·
, r . {
During Traditional Month ·
'
Names Linked at Altar
A honeymoon trip l o
Ensenadl followed the wed-
dl11J of Suwi Hallelt and
Michael Mayo, who exchanged
vows and rings during an
afternoon ceremony In St.
Joachim's Cathollc Church,
Costa Mesa.
1be bridal couple, daughter
and • aon of Afr. and Mn.
Eupoe R. Hallelt Jr, of La
Mirada and Mr, and Mrs,
Andrew Mayo of Costa Mesa
repeated their vOWI after the
Rev. Thomas Nevin.
A lace gown wtth a full skirt
and train that fell from the
shoulders was selected by the
bride. Her short veil was
caught to a crown of white roses, and she complemented
her ensemble with a bouquet
• or white roses centered with
pink rosebuds.
, -
Barbara
In South
Smith Weds
Mrs. David Hayes attended
the bride as matron of honor
and bridesmaids were Mrs.
Sue Stollberg, Mrs. Andrew
Mayo II and Miss Jodie
Milhouse. 'They were Iden·
tically gowned in soft pink em·
pire sheath dresses designed
with short sleeves, and long
Dakota Rites
stemmed pink rose!! were
their floral accents.
?>.tayo, brother of t h e
bridegroom, served as best
man and ushers were Frank
Frand, Bob Oberhardt and
Eugene R. Hallett 111, brother
of the bride .
E1changing their wedding
vows in the Emmanuel
Episcopal Church, Rapid City,
S. D., were Barbara Smith of
Honolulu and Air Foret Lt.
Daniel R. Clarie
'111e bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Woodrow W. Smith
of Huntington Beach, wa!I
given in marriage by her
father, and conducting the
ceremony was the Rev. Han·
ford L. King assisted by the
Rev. Herbei:t ·W. Clari, father
of the bridegroom.
For her wedding the bride
selected a floor length white
sllk linen dress. The simple,
princess lines were accented
with touches of embroidered
lace at the neckline and wrists
of the long sleeves, and her
shoulder length veil was
gathered to a circlet of
matching lace. She carried a
white prayer book and a
cascade of white stephanotis.
Mrs. Harry D. Alfrey of
Newton, Kan .. was her sister's
mitron of honor, and she was
attired in a pastel blue gown
and carried a large wbite
chrysanthemum.
Serving as best man was Air
Force Lt. Earl R. Wonning,
and ushers were Lt.s. Donald
Beeks and Robert Carnes.
Following the ceremony the
newlyweds greeted friends
during a dinner reception in
the Offictrs' Club, Ellsworth
AF Base, where a special
guest was Mrs. C. H. Walker
of Norfolk, Neb., grandmother
of the bride.
The new Mrs. Clarke is a
graduate of Whittier College
and completed a year of
graduate sludy at t h e
University <lf Hawaii. She has
taught school at M a i l i
Elementary School, Hawaii.
The bridegroom, son of the
Rev. and Mrs. Clark of
Pueblo. Colo., is a graduate of
South Colorado Slate College
and now is serving in the
Minute Man System.
The couple will make their
home in Rapid City.
Following lhe ceremony, the
newlyweds r e c e i v e d their
guests in the M<lntlcello
Clubhouse, Costa Mesa, where
•Miss Maggie Evenson and
Miss Anne Hart assisted.
The new Mrs. Mayo rectiv·
ed her ·ba.cbelors degree in
history and drama anc; her Ille
teaching credential from th~
Univepity of California, Santa
Barbara.
Her husband received his
MRS, MICHAEL MAYO
Enuneda Honeymoon
bachelors degree. In industrial
arts from Fresno S t a t e
College and his teaching
credential from the University
or Southern cautomia, where
he will rectlve his mast.era
degree io August.
Los Angeles will be home
for the newlyweds when they
return from their honeymoon.
Hadassah Installs New Fabrics
Considered New orficers ror the Harbor
Chapter of Hadassah were in·
stalled lo a luncheon meeting
wh ich took place in the home
of Mrs. Marvin Slipson.
Servicemen's Wives
Saluted Through Song
Special installation officer
was Mr!. Sam Hoffman,
leader!hip training chairman
of the Southern Pacific Coast
Region of Hadassab, the
Women's Zionist Organization
in America.
Incoming president for the
groUp is t.1rs. Leonard Rubin.
To serve with her are the
Mmes. Allen Shafran, fund·
raising vice president ; Marvin
Slipson, education vice presi·
dent : Martin Nemeth,
membership vice president;
Howard Geller, program vice
president; Barry Michaelson,
treasurer; Stan Gott Ii e b,
recording secretary; Allen
F r a n k I e y 1 corresponding
secretary, and Gary Resnick,
financial secretary.
A Penn State University CI·
tension home furnishing!
specialist suggests l h a t
'homeowners consider v.•here
and how a new upholstery
fabric will be used be.fore it is
bought
Fabric that is suitable in
color, design and texture. and
is colorfast. soil-resistant and
flame-resistant is a good
choice.
PIANO STYLIST
Jocqutllno Nlmo
Rally of Cars
Gets in Gear
Members o{ Gamma Garn·
ma Chapter, Epsilon Sigma
Alpha International, w 11 l
gather for thetr first car rally
Sunday, June 29.
The rally, entitled Crown of
Creation, will get under way
at 10 a.m. with realstration for
drivers and navigators begin·
ning at 9:30 a.m. Registration
fee will be $2.
Trophies and prizes v.·ill be
offered. For further in·
forn1ation those interested
may call Shelli Ertel, ~7.\1711.
Cake Frosting
Class Offered
What is more Important
than the frosting on the cake'
All those who would like to
create cake masterpieces for
special occasions may learn
how to make flowtr1 , rufflea
and borders of frosting in a
spec.la\ summer class optnlng
July 1 and 2.
Teenage and adult cake
decorating classes will be
taught by Ellen Wulfr, under
lhe sponsorship of the Santa
Ana Recniatlon e.nd Par\
Department, In the Santi Ana
Community Center Clubhouse
Annex.
Planlst Jacqueline Fa In
Nims will pre~nt her piano
fantasy titled Fantasia in Red,
White and Blue for the Tues-
day, July 1, meeting of
Newport Beach Christia n
Women'& Club.
The Newporter Inn will be
the selling for the noon event
which also will I e a t u r e
Children's Americana Fashion
Show presenting children's
wear from Sears.
Mrs. Nims, wife of Jerry
Curtis Nims, was graduated
from Florida State .University
with a BA degree in music and
was named to the dean's list
and homecoming court of the
imlverslty.
Recipient of numerous
honors and awards, she is a
representative of C a m p u s
Crusade for Christ Interna-
tional and presents her Fan·
tasia for numerous large
social gatherings which fre·
quently are hosled by wives of
governors or mayors.
The patriot.le piano styling is
111 salute to women whose
husbands serve in the Armed
Forces overseas, particularly
in Vietnam .
Reservations. at $3, are
being accepted by Mrs. Harold
Fischer, 962--1129, and ?ttrs.
William O'Brien, ~5-3anl.
Procedures
Established
Thrte offic~rs from Orange
District are attending the
state board meeting o f
California Federation o I
\\!omen's Clubs, J u n Io r
f\1cmbcrship, taking place to-I
day through tomorrow in the
Newporter Jnn.
Attend ing are t.frs. Terry
Thomas, Orange D i s t r i c t
president ; Mrs. Arthur Korn.
Area D vice president, and
?>.1rs . Frank Hughes,
parliamentarian and s t a t e
convention chairman for 1970.
The meeting wtn provide the
necessary speclficaUons and
procedures for all the In·
dividual federated j u n I o r
women's clubs ln the 1tate.
HB TOPS Clu)>
Allen School b the meeting
South Coast Plaza
3333 Bristol •t San Diego Fwy.
Low•r Mall Near PMy Co.
'" ·~ ·~ ·~ '"' " • .,
-
pl•co !or memben of Hun· NYLON KNIT TOP U111ton DH.ch TOPS Pound $9.00 Plnchers ol 7 p.m, every Mon· Available In eight groovy colors -S-M-L doy, . ._ ________________________ _.
l
' '
Costa, Mesa •
voe. 62, NO. 153, 4 SECTI ONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 1969
us ect ot
Reagan Asl{s 'Tax Hike
Governor Wants A not her Cent on Sales Levy
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan proposed another one cent in-
crease in the sales tax today as part of a
substanlially revised tax reform pro-
gram.
~1ajor amendments to his package
were endorsed by Assembly Republicans,
who previously had been bitterly divided.
Sources said the GOP voted 35-3 for the
program in private caucus.
There was no immediate word whether
Democrats would go along with the plan,
scheduled to be heard later today in the
Assembly Ways and Means Committee.
The increase in the sales tax would be
from rive to six cenls on the dollar.
Another revenue gainer would be A
readjustment of income t;?x credits. Th is
would bring in $7 million. Ho~·ever, mid-
dle income taxpayers wlth large families
would benefit
The money would be spenl for :
-Increasing the homeowners property
tax exemption Crom $750 to $1,650.
-Ex.tending the hom eo wners ex-
emption to welfare recipients and
residents or elder citizen housing develo~
men ts.
-Making permanent a 30 percen t
reduction in the business inventory lax.
-Doubling senior citizens' property tax
relief.
-Increasing the standard income ta1
deduction from $1,000 lo $1,250 for a
single person, and from $2,000 to $2,500
tSe«i REAGAN, Page %)
* 1t *
Cost of $45,000 Hou se Passes
Mesa Leaders Hear Plan Stopgap Bill
For Downtown Revamp
J\1cmbers of the "Costa Mesa Tomor-
row" organization were presented. with
an approach for the redevelopment of the
central part of the city Thursday af·
temoon al the Costa Mesa Golf and Coun-
try Club.
Russell Priebe, an urban re-develop-
ment advisor, gave the group a dynamic
introduction to the problems and methods
used to rebuild cities.
Priebe figured that it would cost the ci·
ly about $45,000 lo start a program of re-
development, but thought the plan would
"pay for itseU."
He asked the "Costa Mesa Tomorrow"
group if the city really needed urban re--
development and said he thoughl th.ey
'tid. He told how such a plan could be in-
itiated and put into effect.
"I don 't see any bad problems in this
city now ." Priebe said, "but 25 years
from now there might be. Now is the
time to gel started on a redevelopment
plan for the futu~.
·'An over:1ll method of approach is
needed to coordinate building in the ci-
ty.,. he added.
As a prerequisite lo get a plan for
development under way several things
must be considered, Priebe noted.
"We mus t develop Costa Mesa under
the State Redevelopment Act of 1947. To
do this we must have a general plan.
"To prepare lhis general plan, it will
lake interested citizens, an area for
redevelopment and the funds to do it
with.
"I estimate it will take from $45,000 lo
!50.000 to prepare an adequate plan ,"
Priebe stated.
To formulate the general plan three
major steps must be taken. he said.
IJ The city council must show a need
(or the rcdevelopn1ent.
2) The council appoints an agency lo
draw up the general plan. . .
31 The citv must have the financial
means to ca r.ry out the project.
Priebe stressed that he didn't think the
costs of the planning would force an in-
crease in the tax rate nor warrant
fed eral assistance.
"The added revenues from the new
businesses that will be attracted to the
community should more than take up the
(See REDEVELOPMENT, Page Z)
Nasser to Visit -Red Countries;
More Talks Se t
D"-ILY l'ILOT SIMI l'tltlt
'PLAN AHEAD -NOW'
Consultant Priebe
Kno·wles Say·s.
AMA Head W an ts
Kin to Get Job
GARDEN CITY, N.Y. (UPI) -Dr.
John JI. Knowles, center of the Nixon ad-
minislration's f i rs t Internal political
stonn, has charged that the head of the
American Medical Associalion (AMA )
wanlS his nephew to have the nation's
top health job for which Knowles was
originally slated for a p. p o i n t m e n t •
(Earlier story , page 4).
Newsday, the Long Island newspaper,
quoted Knowles as saying that the AMA
was solely responsible for stalling his ap-
pointment to the post of assislanl
secretary of health. education and
\\'eifa re. He said the AMA president. Dr.
Dwight Wilbu r. "is anxious to sec his
nephew in the job." The nephew is Dr.
JUcha rd Wilbur, 46. chairma n of the
California ~fcdica\ Associalion.
For Surcharge
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House
gave final congressional approval today
to stopgap legislation to continue. through
July payroll withholding for the 10 per-
cent income tax surcharge Uiat u:pires
al midnighl Monday. (Earlier story, page
7).
Both Democratic and Republican
leaders predicted the House would ap-
prove President Nixon 's tax packaae -
containing an extension of the tax it.self
-on Monday.
The tax bill, as recommended by the
Ways and Means dommlttee at Nixon's
request, would continue the surtax at lt.s
10 percent rate ,far six more months,
throush 1969. and at a live percent rate
for the first six months of 1970.
Today 's bill was necessary, most mem-
bers agreed, lo avoid chaos in private
and govenunental pay offi ces which
otherwise would have been forced lo
recompute pay checks and recalculate
withholdi ng totals for transmission to the
Treasury Department.
Even most opponents of the surtax
extension joined in urging passage of the
emergency measure, which had been ap-
proved by the Senate Wednesday.
They poin ted out that loday'"s bill doe:s
not affect the ultimate liability of the iax·
payer.
In the end, !here was so little objeclion
the bill was passed by voice vote.
Leaders sought to nail down the votes
on which they were counting to pass the
tax extension bill Monday. Both
·nemocrats and Republican managers of
the bill were confident it would pass.
The bill originaily had been set for 11
House vote Wednesday. It was delayed at
the last minute when a nose count failed
lo produce a majority for ii.
Republica ns subsequently solidified
their ranks behind the measure and
l'.'emocratic leaders felt they had counterl
f'noug h addilional Democratic votes lo
put it across, so the vote was reset for
ll1onday.
Summer School
Signups Open
Summer schoo1 enrollment at Lincoln
Intermediate School, Corona de! Pt1ar,
will remain open through "'uesday, July
I, Tom Outline, summer s e s s I o n
coordinator, announced today.
Courses at Lincoln are open to students
!ivins anywhere in the Newport-Mesa.
Unified School District who have c<lnl-
pleled fourlh grade through eighth gradt'.
Outline said. There Is space available in
mo~t courses.
Summer ses1'ions arr II a.m. to nn-0n,
~1onday through Friday, until July ZS.
DAILY PILOT PM!ti W l ldilrt t<Mlli.r
fJheckitag,O.t Pipes
Betsy Staub, 14, inspects &&.Inch pipe> to be used in portion of $300,000
slorm drfiiD and street resurfacing project currently under way in
\Vestcliff area of Newport Beach. Major p'rt of project involves
Westcliff Drive between Irvlne Avenue abd Dover Drive. New sewer
lines and water main also are being installed.
Outside Study of Noise
Problem Asked by CofC
Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce President Dic"k Steve.is today call·
ed for city hiring of an oulSide consultant
Lo report on the potential damages of ex-
panded c<lmmcrcial jet traffic over the
Harbor Arca.
"We m·ust do all possib le to defend
ourselves against the possible bligh t of
Mrs. N. Wrig ht,
Pionee r Mes a
Resident, Dies
A funeral service for pioneer Cost a
Mesa resident Mrs. Nellie Wright , whr>
died at 88 Tuesday after SO years' loca l
residence. will be held Saturday at Bell
Broadway Mm-tuary.
Rites ror the elderly wklo~ who moved
here with her late husband in 1919, will be
at 11 a.m., with interment in Melrose Ab--
bey Mausoleum, Orange.
The Wrights llv 5801h Center St.,
next lo the Boys' ub of the Harbor Area
Central Branc , but Mrs. Wright was
confined to a onvalescent home during
her long, final lness.
Survivors i lude sons Haro ld W. Sr.,
and \Villard N. Wright. of Costa Mesa , a
dat•ghter. ~1rs. Betty Green , who stayed
in KansAs when her parents came to
California. seven grandchildren, 22 great
grandchildren and two great great
grandchildren.
our lovely communi!y throush further ex-
pansion or commercial jet lllghUI," he
said.
He said the consultant reports would
provide more than generali ze d
statements and emotional appeals as
armament against fu rther conlmercial
jct expansion.
"We strongly recommend that the city
retain oulSide consultants to conduct
dcfinilivc studies in areas such as ai r
pollution, fallout contamination and
damage, danger to schools, noise and
probable devaluatio n or properly values,"
he said.
Stevens offered the chamber's help In
soliciting donations from citizens to help
pay for the consulting services.
He urged careful consideration or his
suggestion.
"If such studies had been made in
years past we might not be in our present
unle nable position. Let us not repeat thal
oversight," he warned,
Sniper Fires
On Patrol Car
OAKLAND (UPf) -A sniper fired
about six shots today at a California
Highway Patrol ca r and a truck on the
Nimitz Freeway but no Injuries were
r1.>ported.
LONOON IUPI ) -Egyptian President
Gamal Abd el Nasser will visit the Soviet
Union and other Communist countries in
lale Augu st, Arab diplomatic sources
hf're said today.
•lis agenda Includes stops I n
Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and possib1y
East Germany, the sources said.
Knowles told Newsday in a telephone
Interview from his Swampscolt. lllass.,
summer home. that the AMA leadership
wants "their own watchdog on a long
leash held tightly in Chicago lthe Af.1A
headquarters city)." '
"They're afraid I'd be outspoken and
ask the right questio ns .•. " he said. Such
questions, he adde1:l, would concern the
medieal profession's responsibility for
•·skyrocketing doctors' fees " and for
assuring the availability of good medk:al
care regardless of finances.
'"Judy Gave All.!'
One bullet ripped through the-patrol
car carrying officers James R. Lanier,
29, and Jami!.'! R. Wheeler, 2$, near the
JOSlh Avenue overpass about I :30 p.m.
More lihol! were heard shortly af ..
lcrwdrd and truck driver Ray Hunter, 56,
Castro Valley, said two bullets hit his
cab, missina.bim by incMs.
Nasser is expected tr begin his lour
\vith several days of talks In Moscow wilh
Soviet leaders. Then he will spend two or
three weeks at the Tskhaltubo Hea lth
Center in Georgia where he was treated
tor sciatica. a nerve ailment, last year.
The diplomalS said Nasser was in.&ood
heatt.h and the visit to the center was for
followup treatment and relaxation.
In their Kremlin talk s. Nasser :iind
Jl ussian leaders wi ll resume rectnt ex·
changes held In Cairo belweep Egyptian
ofUclals and Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromy~o. covering the big pcnrer
talks and the Mlddle East crisis, sowrcts
~aid.
Stock Mnrkeu .
NEW YORK (AP) -The sl<>ck nwktl
closed almost even today, with inve.'flon:
reported cautious and on the sidelines.
Trading slowed near the close. (Sec
quotations. Pages 1~17).
The Dow Jones induatrlal average at
l :30 p.m. was off 1.18 at 889.12. Gains
continued lO lead losses but by a nar·
rower margin than earlier.
Jam es Mason Eulogizes Sing er
NEW YORK (uPJ) -Actor Jame.,
t.1ason eulogized Judy Garland today as
"the funniest girl in the world" who gave
more to her audiences and friends than
<Ille received in return. (Earlier story,
Page 5).
The eulogy, released a,n hour belorc the
runeral or the 47-year·old singer-actress.
praised Miss Garland as "a person who
ga\!!: richly both to her vast audience and
her friends, but needed to be repaid."
Jtcr greate.at gJJ't, he &aid . was the ability
"lo sing 50 that it would break your
heart."
"She needed devoUon and love beyond
the resources of any of us," Mason said
sadly.
More than 20,000 Garland fans passed
her bier at an east side funeral chapel
during the lying-ln-stat.e Thursday and
through the early hours of today. lier
husband, MJckey Deans, ordered Lhe body
lo remain on view continuously unlll
preparations for the 1 p.m: funeral bq:an
at 11 e.m.
Six mourners were In line when the
chapel door• were closed aod they were
turned away, disappointed.
Police toUlll six empty shells of 30-30
caliber.
Hodges Escapes Fire
CHAPEL HILL, N.C, (AP) -Luther
II. !lodges, 70, former North Cirollna
governor and U.S. secrelary of com-
merce from 1961 to 19&5, broke a leg
when he jumped from lht secone story of
his home as it was swept by fU'e Thurs-
day night
,He aJso suffered smoke lnhllatlon but
was reporte:d Jn 11Usfactory condJtlon in
• ho>pllal.
•
-.. -
Today's Final
N.Y. ~toeks
TEN CENTS
own
'Had to Do
It,' Says
Prisoner
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 IM D.l ilr P'llef Sttff
Facing a five-year to-life sentence, a
Costa Mesa prisoner made a break for
freedom seconds after a telephone call to
his mother today, but was shot down by a
deputy marshal outside ·Harbor District
Judicial Court.
A Costa Mesa police sergeant racing
his patrol car as dispatched to the 11 : 15
a.m. escape alarm was struck broadside
by another auto within sight of the scene,
but no one was hurt.
James W. Needs, 29. of Azusa, was hit
in the left rear hip by Deputy Marshal
Edward Winslow, a pistol marksman who
said he never had to shoot a man in a 20-
year ~tarine Corps career .
.. 0on·l blame yourseU," wit:oe,sses
quoted Needs as moaning whUe he lay in
a parking lot awaiting an ambulance.
"I'm sorry, I knew I was going to the
'joint' and I had to do It," the felony
suspect reportedly told the jaller deputy
who recaptured him with a .38 caliber
slug. ·
HOSPITALIZED
Needs, charged along with a companion
as involved in a Sears & Roebuck Com·
pany stolen refund slip forgery operation
was taken to Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital after the incident.
Nurses said shortly after noon that he
was in satisfactory condition wilh a bullet
in the hi{> wound and ./ fractured left
femur, broken either b the slug or tho
parking lot fall.
He was lo be transferred to the jail
ward al-Orange County Medical Center.
The break for freedom today was lht
second alleged escape attempt by Needs
in the Ju t 11 days, since he was charged
wilh pulling a .3: caliber automaUc pistol
June 18 when apprehended by 1tore
· guards.
Court aides said he had just been
counseled by his public defender aboul
eqtering a plea to charges stemming
from tbe case at the South Coast Plaza
Shopplng Center department store when
he fled.
He had been booked on suspicion of
assault with a deadly weapon , armed
robbery, commission of burglary armed
with a gun, burglary and for gery.
Needs and an alleged co-cons pirator ar-
rested later. Joh.n P. Rogers, 31, of
Baldwin Park. have been held in lieu of
$5,000 bail at Orange County Jail, pending
preliminary hearings.
STOLE REFUNDS
i\cco rding to police reports, Rogers
was accused of stealing a book of cash
refund slips from a Los Angeles Sears
store where he was employed after the
items began turning up forged and cash--
ed .
An alert cashier at the Costa Mesa
store called security guards when a man
idenlifled as Needs tried to cash one for
$121, leading to thebfune !IS melee.
Security guards Robert W. Gow, 47,
and Wilham Humphrey, 51, said they
look Needs by each arm \Yhen he refused
to go to their security off ice, but he broke
free and pulled a gun arter promising to
cooperate.
AuthoritiC! at the court complex. at 567
W. 18th St., said today that Deputy
Marshal Wlralow, 46, had accompanied
Needs lo place a phone call to his mother
about entering his plea.
Taking the prisoner back to the holding
(See FUGITIVE, Pa1e %)
Orange Coast
Weather
The mornings will be nothing to
wri te home about, but the week~
e~ afternoons will be pretty nice,
wilh sunshine and temperatures in
the low 70's along the coast.
INSW E TODAY
Apollo Commcndtr Neil Ann.
st,.ong 1'p1dltd rank" to be first
man on the moon, says former
NASA "voice" Pa1i.l lfa11.ey. See
storu Pagt 1.
I
I
I
I I
•
•
" _,
p.._ Pllffl l ,
FUGITIVE •••
tmk, aald lloputy Manha! Al Elcbler, iNteds tu*!WY t"'1*I ri&bt fn>m Ille
jGnGr'ol Ille IOl1'1hll'S .a1ce and ran.
I'
j l't'-t ..-.·rrequeody not rubo1Dnd"'"'"'''· -j~~~<tjt.~~~'.~~ fecl'f;r llUCh ~ trips.
"Sk>p, Needl, or I'll shoot," witnesses
quoted the deputy marshal as yelling,
i npeatln( the arder. thtn firing from
aboul 40 fetl wten the prisoner Ignored
the third command.
"He was moving pretty fast at that
~ point," Aid Newpon Beach Police Of.
~ fietr' 'n'lomu B. Smith, who saw Needs
hit u he reached the corner of a tern·
.• porary trailer courtroom.
Qeputy Wi{lslow was questioned by
Costa Mesa police and Orange County
Sheriff's investigators, who announced
they would handle the reyort on the in-
cident.
Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Jim Green was
en route to the 5eene as several police
· unit! converjtd In the area, when his
u patrol car was involved in an acciden t at
Rochester And East 18th Streets.
Lawmen present praised De p u t y
Winslow for keeping cool and not firing at
the fleeing fe.lony escapee until other
methoda of stopping him had failed:
Winslow went home on his lunch hour
after giving invesU&ators 111.s e.xplanaUon
of even~ leading up to the shooUng of
Needs, woo allegedly threat.nod to kill
bis captors in the June 11 arrest
"He's kind or shaken ," 11ald Marshal's
Sgt. Edward J. Postel. "The first thing
that worried him was if he had hurt lhe
· guy badly." ...
Harbor Youths
' Fly to Europe
Saturday night 160 teenagers, au but 20
from the Harbor Area, will begin winging
their way on a 4i<tay study tour of
Europe.
~.,, Ei&ht.b through 12th grad.en who paid
' $998 each will be accompanied by 16
teacher chaperones, two nW'Sel!I, four in-
structors, 11. principal and a vice prln·
cipal. Glrll outnumber boys about three
to one.
·'·: The fint-time program. which may
·. · btcOme a · yearly event is sponaored by
M, Newport-Af~a Unified School District
·: and arranged through the Foreign Study
_League.
'. Students will travel aCTOSS Europe in
• · five buses and spend eight days each at
:...• unJveralUes in London, Amsterdam,
Paril, KilzbuehJ (Austria} and Rome. ~ • The 20 student.I who aren't from
· · Newport-Mesa schools come from school
dlmicts throughout the county.
John Dean, Newport-Mesa schools cur·
ric:Ulum direct.or, will be principal for lhe
trip, and Jack King, ll>rbor His!! vl<o
principal will be usistsnt 1::· lnstructon' will be N e ·w p o r e s a
teachers Mar1JJ'D· EIUai -Carol •
Rooald Dahl Ind ~ltchell · '•·
' .
Two .SA Markets
Hii by Bandits
Holdup men hit two markets In gooth
Santa Ana Thur..tay night and early thiJ
momlng and 1ot away wl.tb $815.
· Flnt to be struc\: 1t 9:27 p.in. was the
,. Tic Tac Market at 1824 S. Standaid Ave. ~ Two armed men confronted clerk Jerry
~ Mulllru and demanded cash. Thty Sol
~ $600.
C A lone anned bandit held up night clerk ~ Anthony OeGuldo at the Thrlllimart. U08
• W. Edinger Ave. at 2:20 a.m. He got
away with '2l5. PoHoe did not believe the
lYr"O holdups "''ere connected.
Connie Stevens' 'Ex'
Divorced by No. 2
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actor Jtmts
Stacy. former husband of singer Connie
Stevens, was divorced Thursday by Ills
second wife, actress KJm Darby.
?i.iiss Darby, 21. said Stacy, 32, told her
he did not want "the responsibility of
being married ." She was awarded $400 a
month li4Jlport money for ~ daughter,
Heather, aged 11 months.
OAllV P:tOI
~5 C<Wit ~IL !IHI~ COMl'A.,.,
• t.Mrt N. W•t4
•r.*-"' .... """""''
J.,k '· C¥tl..,
""" ,, • ._ -Gt'MTlll .V.-•t
T~t1111t k1evll
··~ Tl101111t A. M11,,~i~t ........... ,~. ldl ... ---llO Wt1I lty 51<111
M•lll1tt .tl411rtn: P.O. I•• ll•O. tJ6Jl
°""'-~ IMd!t nu _, .. _ MoJ.._.
......,...•-~m,_,._
HWI!.,....., ""'" at Sito llfftl
SPECIAL TRAINING -Instructor Len Schreiber shows Joe Lopez
(center) and 'Philip Palacio how to align wheel in special Orange
Coast College program for high •chool dropouts.
Dropouts Get Help
Paid to Attend Courses at OCC
A rroop of high school dropoots, troubles wlth English, and most of them
discipline problems all, ls being paid to felt they rtally had DO reason to try."
attend Orange Coast College. Most of the young men were not "turn·
There the dropouts le.am to become ed on" the first two weeks of class. But
service station mtchanica and lake a new when they actually began working on
interest in l!ichool, partly because they cars and trocks in the _third week, in·
are being paid $1.60 an hour to learn. terest came quickJy.
The 22 young men in the program who Faculty members brought their cars
were referred by the Neighborhood Youth over to let the youths work on th em.
Corps of Santa Ana have several things in They paid for the parts and the young
common: they have had discipline pr~ men supplied the labor.
blems, dropped out of high. Khoo!, and Len Schreiber. the instructor for the
most are under 18 years old. course, Is as turned on with th'e program
Wages are being paid to the sludents as the students.
with federal Manpower Otft.nse Training "Working with these kids has been
Ad funds. The instructors' salary Js paid fun," Schreiber said. "I really mean that.
by Orange Coast Junior College District. Once they got going, there was just no
Thirty·two hours a week the former holding them bck."
dropouts learn to do anything on an Schreiber sees only one drawback -
automobile that can be done. in a service and It's not the fault of the students.
statioo; brake work, alignment, wheel "We are turning out trained young
balancing, lube aod oil changes, minor men," he saJd, "capable of holding down
tuneups: -you name it. a job with any organU.ation. But a good
When they have learned what they need share of. them are under 18 yetrs of age.
!:me~t~:Eri im::a~~'re;· wJr".~ffi~s utbi:~!W~ ;~~fo!~ ~rJ::
they wllJ·llll aiikJJ el a Joi@ ' ' 1 I'm Jl;ald cll>f'll fifl ~their old
-the'collqellell:i' emfinf " hablti. .. / , ·
fleedeG j~'s. tor almost all ·Of hem, It "If people 1'111 only hire them. they'll
wHl be their first gainful job. one which do a job for th•m. And they'd like the
~ulres a skill. With that comes a sense chance."
of ptide. How about hiring them? If someone
Pat Emard, a tall blonde from the San-· does, will they stay on the job? Accord ing
ta AnA branch of the Neighborhood Youlh ' to Mia Emsrd, the statistics show that
Corps, geta an obvious satisfaction from these boys last longt>r on the job than
helping these young men get a start. others.
"We try io teach them to have a aense "One · rtason is that they have been
or respolllilMijty and good work habill turned down ao many times in the past,
and attitudes.'' she said. "Before they that when the1' do get a job, they value it
came here, most of them had absolutely and they keep it," she said. "They want a
no moUvation. Some of thern have grea\ job badly.''
REDEVELOPMENT PLAN.S • • •
•lack," Pdibe add<d.
It will take about a year to gel the final
plans set and st.art with the adoption of
lhe plan, he said.
The overall coils of the pregrarp once
adopted will range from $1 to $2 million,
Priebe noted. "When the aener31 plans
for the project are started, we will be
ible to ttU how much the ultimate price
tag will be."
''What the locality wants to do and
what It finally does will determine U the
\·enture will be a success," Priebe con·
eluded.
Another discussion on the Cotta Mesa
re-development theme was pre1e11ted 6y
Jack Curley, general manager of the ·
DAILY P!Wf.
He told the Costa Mesa Tomorrow
rnembers of tht business trend! in the
downtown area.
Senate Unit OK's
Oil Liability Bill
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Senate
public worl15 subcommiltee has approved
legislation to make 6hip owners and oil
drillers fully liable for the co.st of clean·
ing up oil slicks and spills.
Approval came Thuriday, as Gov .
Reagan's admlnistraton announced In
Sacramento that it was proposing a
c~r watch on ortshore oil drll1Jn1 in the
Santa Barbara Channel.
The bill pas.'ltd by the Senale sub-
commiltet is mort 5lringent lllan one
passed by the Houl\e last April. It would
place absolute liability for oil cleanup
cost& on any shipowntrS Involved, wl!h
three exce.pllona.
They would be durln1 an •cl of war. a
negligent act by the government, or an
act O{ God.
Tht limit l• bo char(ed 11aJn1t I
ve.s1tl'1 awne.r would be $150 a grou t.on
of t.bc ship's weight. nt Jiouae bill provldfd that an owntr
would be liable only In caae:s of
negll1tnce and the liability would be $100
per ton ur to a maximum ol $10 million.
'
"ntlrty.four storts make up what we
call the Downtown C6sta Meg a
f\ferchants. They did 35 percent more
busines.s than did Westclilf Pla.u, while
the area exceeded Harbor Center by
more lhan ten percent in the past year:'
Curley stated.
"\Vith .11.n overall gain or 25 percent in
the downtown area over 1968 18les ..•
does this look like :: fa iling merchan·
disins area to you?"
Let's Celebrate
Moori Day, Says
Westminster Boy
Should July 21 be a national holiday?
Ptrbaps we could call it "Astro Day" in
honor of the first scheduled American
landing on the moon .
At lea~t one person thinks it wquld be a
gre•l Idea. And to prove ir, 16-ye'lr-<)!d
David Toole, of 8900 Universe Ave.,
\Veslmlnster, sent his sugge sUan to
President Nixon.
David, a Fountain Valley High School
student, suggested July 21, lentaU,·e dale
of the American landln& on the moon, be
commemorated and recognized for its
tremendous scientific impa ct.
"\\'e alrtady have holiday• for love
{Valenllne·s Day), New Year's. and even
the practica l jokes {Aprtl Fool's). why
not one for the grtatest scientific: feat in
history," •TOte David.
lie said ha 1lruck on the idea wh.ile
talking 1bout space tlploratlon one day
•nd suddenly rtallied no 'one had ever
honortd man's space achieve.menls In
such 1 manntr.
DavJd'1 sugaestion wu al&o maJled to
Govtmor Ronald Rua1111 atat.e Senator
John G. SChmlls (J\.Tuttin) a" d
Assemblyman Robert. Burke (R·Run·
tll\ilDD Jl<ach).
'
Nixon Goes to Canada
MASSENA. N.Y. (UP () -:... _,._t
N,_-'Joined Canadian 'Prbnt • M~ ~gJ)iott Ttud.t!U..!l the~ to-
d1y to commemorate the 19th an·
n1versJry ef the St. Lawrence SeaWay.
The two bead$ oC state met at the
monument to International friendship on
the Robert Moses-Robert H. Saunders
Power Dam , One leg of th.~ compass
shaped monument Is In the United States
and the other in Clilada.
After meetin& at the monument, Ni1on
and Trudeau got into a sedan and drove
OCC Parking
Figures Just
Don 't Add Up
Take 6,800 junior collega students at·
riving mostly on wheels, cive thtm only
%.~ parking spaces and you've got a
mad hunt for a place to stop the buggy.
The situation is going to be a litUe bet-
ter next fall at Orange Coast College
when 379 add.ltJonal parking slotJ are ad·
ded. But not much. Because there'll be
700 additional students, too.
Frank Hopkins, dean of research,
figures 50 percent of students drive cars
to school. Usually on Monday, Wednesday
and Friday they're nearly all on campus
at once, he said.
The parldn1 lot will be constructed dur·
Ing the summer on a vacant field near
the agriculture buildin1 where students
have grown grain.
Under an estimated $60,000 contract,
the area will be graded for 6.12 spaces,
but only 379 be put In with pJving and
stripi ng. To complete the rest will cost an
additional $37,500, and tht junior college
just will have to wait until it has the
money, according to Finance Director
Correllan Thompson .
He said It is possible the rest of the
area could be oiled for parking.
f'rom PG1Je l
REAGAN • • •
for married couples.
-Eliminating the sales tax on pros-
thetic devices, fruit juices and cigar.
ettes.
-Reducing assessed values <ID open
i;pace lands.
For lbe Bay Area Rapid Transit
flistrict counties of Contra Costa,
Alameda and San Frapcisco, the sales
tax increase aCt"ually would result in a
6~ cent rate. The legislature previously
raised lhe sales tax in those counties a
half cent to finance completion of the
transit system.
Reagan's legislative budget sponsor,
··Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle· CR·
Riverside), called this "phase. one" of the
governor's ta1 reform program. "Phase
two,'' which includes v o I u n tar y
withholding of the state income lax and a
one pertent increase In gross income,
now will not be pushed as hard as the iJ1..
itial phase, he said.
Biddle said there was "no uraency" in
the phase l\\'O portion be.cause much. of it
would require approval by the voters on
the 1970 ballol
Before the revision, "phase one" would
have raised on1y $100 mi!Uoa in revenue.
Now, it WOIJld net $465 million.
The property tax relief proposal would
result Jn a $165 annual savings for the
average homeowner with a $10 tax :ate,
Diddle aaid.
The package will require a two-thirds
vole of each leglslalive House.
l
.. tbe D.*ftbl I>. ~ loct. Tb.uiandi "tft ml blricl IO-;r.et NllGil
and twa~ Canadian and ~A flags~--. ,.....
Th~ Prfsldent fltw-by pres!Cfentlal
helicopter for h.ls me.etlnJ wljh Trudeau
after landing in Air fofct One at the
Plattsburg)l, N. Y. AFB.
The two free world leaders grett.ed
each. other at the site where Queen
Elliabtt.h and President EisenhOwer
dedicated a porUon of the se:away 10
yean ago.
: Alter~~-Ung the Dw!sht D. 'E ~ lock: Nt.on ~•n.d.. fnld.tfU fl!w_Jo MQntreJ I fM a. tour
01 "Man and His Werld," an Jnternatlanal
eiposltlon on the site of Expo '61 on lie
Salnt·Helene.
Canadian oUlcJal.s blocked it off for the
day because of possible demonstrations.
~ilon last saw Trudea u when lhe
prime minister visited Washington March
24 and S5. H• was the first world leader
to meet with the new Presiden\ in Waahin&too. •
Working on All 4
'
Army Crews to Deliver
Package Job on Groins
Army Corps of En1lneers staff !'lave
scrapped original plans to build their four
new West Newport groina one at a time
and today decided to start dlglng on the
remaining two.
The new plan should lop a month off
the expected completion date of the
$800,000 project, but the one aspect of the
job that will cause a mwive beach
closure will still wall until afler Labor
Day weekend.
City Harbor and Tidelands Coordinator
George Dawes said the new plan will
mean diggin1 of the deep pill on the last
two groins will start immediately.
Within a few more weeks the pits will
be full o( atones and all four groins will
be half-built. ending al the surf lines.
The rock will be covered with sand as
:soon as large cranes finisb dropping the
granite, being hauled in from Corona en
cradle-shaped trailers.
The change in plans means beach
clos~ will be condensed, since 150 !eet
either side of the digging will be alf
limjts to beachgoers.
The firs t groin at 06th Street has reach·
ed the surf line and is be.ing covered by
bu1ldazers.
Digging klr th.e second one at 54th
Street is fin ished and the first stones
were droppe<' there this momin1.
The next two slreet ends to feel lb!!
clamshel1 crane's bite will be 48th. and
30th streets.
"Residents of the area "have been ex·
tremely patient. So far we ti.ave had only
one adverse comment and that dealt with
the equipment storage area," Da\\·es
said.
Tax Rebate Bill Stalled
But Burke Stays Hopeful
Residents of California cooperati\'e
housing projects such. as Leisure World
may not get a f1D property ta:::. rebate in·
illattd by Assemblyman Robert H. Burke
<R·Huntington Beach ) Utls year, but don't
give up hope.
Despite the lact hi:. bill AB 575 is stall·
e:d in the Senate Finance ComJl\ittee, the
70th rfutrict legislator still holds out
some hope for Its pas.sage.
"I am pur1ulng every angle available to
get the tas relief benefits for these peo..
pie.," Burke said today in a press release.
He noted that Sen. George Deukmejian
{R·Long Beach) has also inlroduced SB
686, whlch Is similar to his measure giv-
ing cooperative homeowners a '70 refund
this year and a $750 exemption next year.
"At that lime, l'U try to have AB $75
reconsidered," Burke added.
"I've been working very closely with
member1 of the Revenue and Taxation
Commitlee and the Governor's office in
$800 Diamond Ring
Stolen at Pier 11
Someone snagged an $800 diamond ring
from Pier 11, but it wasn't one of those
phenomenal finds in a fish 's belly, Costa
Mesa police said today.
Collegian Paulette Cox. 21 . of 1323 Arl-
ington Ave., Anaheim , said someont stole
that item !rom her purse under a t.able in
the popular spot at 1976 Newport Blvd .,
while she was dancing.
Summer Safe
STARTS TUESDAY, JULY ht
helping with the formulation of the lax
reform packa.ge, .. Burke conliriucd.
"It's antici pated lhat the tax reform
legislation will be debated on the
Assembly floor over the weekend so these
measures might be approved prior to
budget adoption t.1onday," th.e Orange
County lawmaker added.
"Even though AB 575 has been stalled
and residents of cooperative housing may
not get the $70 rebate,'' he concluded,
"the inclusion of the intent of the bill in
the tax [eform package will insure these
people of the exemption in future years."
Couple Marries
01i Anniversary
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Mr. and
f\frs. Paul H. Thomas of Portland were
l""larrled on their 50th wedding an·
ni versary.
They were divorced about 44 years ago
and each married again. Their spouses
died: -hers 12 years ago, his last sum·
mer.
They became reacquainted w h t n
Thomas telephoned their cnly child , Mrs.
R. J . Oliver, and his former wife
answered . On June 3 they flew to Reno
and were remarried.
A \\'edding recept ion Is planned Satur-
day, with tour grandchildren and one
great grandch.ild to watc h them cut the
V>edding cake.
Our Annual Sale will feature many famous groups, from
such lines as DREXEL, HINREDON, HERITAGE. Also to be
incl uded in the sale are all of the upholstery items in stock ,
plus special · order upholstery merchandi se at substantial
savings. Accessories, lamps and pictures will be reduc ed.
Don 't hesitate •. , come in and make your selections now.
You will be pleasantly surprised at the I a r g e variety of
quality furniture on display now at reel savings.
Drexel 's sale merchandise will be reduced starting Monday,
June 30th.
W'I All IOl lY POI ANY INC.NYIMllMCS ~000 rr YMI CONSTJKTIOM WOllt: ON WhlCLI,, lllfl. TMIU IS
WY AC:CUI • PAIKJN• AT THI UAI Of OUI ITOIL
NIWPOllT llACH
1117 -ol!H Dr, ta.-0
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"'' ''""'" AT RAINBOW'S END, ADORATION
Thousand1 Line Up for One L•st Glance
Goodbye to Star
Thousaruh File Past Judy
NEW YORK (AP) -In dition to a mass of formal
deitb u in life, th e· floral tribmes many moumen
magnetism of Judy Garland broughl their own bouquets
cootinued undiminished today, and placed them. on the pews.
drawing thousands of ad· Many men carried single
mirers through tbe night and roses.
into the morning to flie past Miss Garland was dressed in
her casket and bid goodbye. lhe Wver lame wedding gown
"She's found that rainbow in which she married Deana,
now,'' Mary Roberts, a 20-her fifth h1,15band , three
year-old typist said quietly months ago, Silver 1Uppers
after gazing on the coffin lined with silver buckles w er e on
with pale blue velvet. "I hope her feet.
&he's finally got some peace." A dolell feet from· the coffin
They queued up for as long was a large wreath of peonies
as two hours in the gray, shaped lite a rainbow -for
humid afternoon Thursday Judy's vocal signature, the
before entering the chapel for haunting "Over the Rainbow."
a last brief glimpse of the 47· She first sang the song at
year-old actress who died Sun-the age of 17 in the movie
day in London of an accidental "Wl:zard of Oz." She played
overdose of sleepqig pills. the role of a waif, Dorothy,
"People identified with that cooviriced that happiness lay
woman," said Marilyn Ford, just over the rainbow.
33, a Queens h o u s e w I f e . In life, through her five
''Everyone's gut •lltlrr-.andr7 ."'M'l'.fi'ps and a. career that
problems, e~ryone gets Jone-soared to great heights as well
Jy, Judy Garland made all or as skirted the edge of show
w; feel something tied her and business oblivion, the rain·
us together." · . 'how's end always seemed to
At the scheduled midnight elude be.r;
closing there were 3 , o o o James Mason, who appeared
persons walUng ootside the opposite Mias Garland in "A
• Frank E. Campbell funeral Star is Born," flew in from
parlor on Madison Avenue at Geneva, S wit :t er I a n d, to
East Blst Slreet, and Judy's deliver the eulogy. The Rev.
husband, Mickey Deans, asked Peter Delaney, who married
th at the doors be kept open. Deans and Miss Garland, was
Deans, who found Judy dead to officiate al the prl va1e
In the bath.room of their services.
Che!Sea cottage, also asked Following th e Episcopal
that mourners be allowed into will be bivied in Femcliff
the chapel until an hour and a funeral servict, Miss Garland
half before the private funeral Cemetery Maus o I e um .
&erviceatlp.m. Hartsdale, N.Y., In
In.side the fragrance of Westchester County jwt north
nowers filled the air. In ad· of New York.
Liberal.s Say Nixon
Weakening Vote Law
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Nixflll'S . pl;1n for
changing the 1965 law intended
to assure southern Negroes
the right to vote has been at·
tacked by House liberal.5 as a
delaying action which would
weaken the law.
Tbe proposal would extend
the voting rigbta act to cover
all lO slates tnmad ,of the
seven Southern states cur·
rently covered. It would ask
that literacy tests be outlawed
as a qualifJcatlon for voting
anywhere in the country.
But th e proposal drew
criUcis-m from some llberals
who !!aid It would dilute the
Goldber g:
Save Sirhan
NEW YORK (AP)
Former SUpreme Court
Justice Arthur J. Goldber1 has
written Gm. Rooa!d Reagan
of calilornla 1Uing com-
mutation of the death senteMe
oo Sirhan Blshara Sirhan,
&SS1smi of Robert F. Ken-
nedy,
Nolin& lhat h< hlmsdl had
beto listed In Slrhan1s dl1ry as
a n assasstnatJon prospect,
Goldberg uld:
''The evolving standards of
decency th•t mart the prc>-
gresa ot our llOdety now con-
demn 1.t barbaric and in-
human lhe deliberate Jn-
stltuUooalbed t a k I n f or
hwnan Ille by the stale!
original emphasis on the
South. One section that was
attacked would strike the re·
quiremenl the seven deep
South states get approval from
the U.S. District Court in
Washington or from the al·
torney general before they
change any of their local laws
affecting voting.
Rep. William M, McCulloch
(R-Ohio), ... of the key
Republicans who will be draf·
ling the bill, c:onfirmed h< WU amens: tbose who urged lbe
President to recommend 1
simple extension of the civil
rights law rather tkan 1
modification.
McCu lloch sat In silence
Thursday as Alty. Gen. John
N. Mitcbetl outlined Nixon's
P' r o p o s e d · modifications.
Liberal Democrats a n d
Republicans on the committee
dfsmissed them one by one as
steps backward.
Afterwards the white-haired,
ruddy~a<ed McCulloch. 1
member of the President's
Com mission on Civil
Disorders, pnlllOlll1C<d Nbion'1
plan "a weebr vot.inJi: rights
ad than an extension."
~ ...... -
Meetings
.,
• i
ANAHEIM
++4 N. Euclid 535-8121
Mon, thru Set.
I 0 •,m, to. 9:30 p.m.
;\
Frldal, Jvnt 21. 1'169
« -
. --,
. "
SKINNY IS NEW, SKINNY
IS NOW: THE BODY-HUG
Long on cling, as lean as we've seen, it's the slimmest
sl ither of shirting you can weer this season. Pour yourself
into this kn itty new length of Enkelure®• nylon by Weber ·
end close up the look with fourteen tiny buttons. Red,
navy, blue , gold, wine, white or block. sizes I 0-1 b, 11.00.
Moil end telephone orders invited.
Blouses, Shirts, 66,
•T.M. of American Enke Corp.
"
NEWPORT HUNTINGTON BEACH
~7 Fashion Island 644-1212
Mon. thru Fri. 10 e,m. to '<1:30 p,m,
Set. ,I 0 ·o.m.' to 6 p.m.
7777 Edinger Ave. 892-333 f
Mon. thru S.t,
I 0 o,m. to 9:30 p.m.
•
.
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I D~Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE 1 · ..
l
For Future Beauty I
Ail: a sanipl~ group of ~ell-traveled people wt~
reellOnably good taste to name 10 beautiful cities and
you woli\d not expect to find Co5ta Mesa on theu list.
But this tableland town has many aesthetic advan· ;;....---tag .. -.com_pared-to-citl...of..simila._size.-Xbe-key is to
preserve ""ose we have while developing new ones from
scratch.
Just about every area of town -the six now pro-.
posed for individual representation under a Costa Mesa
lleautificaUon Committee reorganization proposal -
bas its own distinctive mark.
District 1 on the coastward east side has attractive
new homes and commercial enterprise in transitional
development. District 2 on the west side may ~verlook
a marina, while encompassing hall of the city golf
course. District 4 features the Estancia Adobe of the
past, \Vhile District 5 may in the future sprout sky·
scrapers as downtown Orange County. A major green·
belt stretches across the city from the river to the east·
ern boundary.
Paris San Francisco, and oU!.er famed cities
have the 'charm of the past, while Buenos Aires, Bra·
silia -and Costa Mesa -are cities of today and the
future.
Costa Mesa is wisely planning today for a more
beautiful future.
Mesa's Policing Costs
John Q. Public often gripes about the rislni cost of
services he underwrites, especialJy when he t1 cited for
a traffic violation while burglars and bandits run ram·
pant.
The Costa Mesa City Council will soon study a pre-
liminary fiscal budget, which includes a police depart·
ment request up only 8 percent from last Y6'r. Nation•
ally, the average annual budget increase for city police
departments has been 12 perc~nt. .
But, since John Q. and his neJghbors -some of
Dirty Joke
Has All But
Disappeared
A colleague in the news room sent tne a
brief Inter-office memo not long ago:
'"Jbe dirty joke has all but disappeared. I 1eldom bear one. Two years ago, I en·
· ·Cciintered a couple a week, maybe more.
J still meet the same guys with the same
frttutncy. No, no jokes."
~ 'ftlis bas been my experience, too, and I
am glad. Not because I object to dirty
jokes per se, but because not one in a
~ was truly funny -but you felt
~ had to laugh (at lea.st weakly) to
danonstrate your virility and pod
fellowship.
-1 ·think the rapid increase in sexual
pmnissiveness in the U.S. the last. ~ew
yws has killed off the dirty joke. A dirty
joke is buically a "rea~on-fon:natio~"
to sexual repressiveness 1n a society; it
is not a normal outlet for humor.
ft1ANY SOCIETIES have not had any
dirty jokes, and would not understand or
appreciate them -not because these
cultures are puritanical. but quite the op.
I posite. because they are permisSive ln
tt.e area of sex, and fi nd it in-
comprehensible that we smirk and anig· ae.r about a subject that lo them ii as
&1mple and natural and obvious as
bmthing.
Jt hi nc, accident that in Denmark last year. when all censorship or pornograph
ic material was lifted, sale of pornogra•
pbic literature on newsstands dropped al-
most to the vanishing point.
IN HIS RECENT book, ';Rationale of
the Dirty Joke," G. Legman points out
that "The almost total prohibitiveness of
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
How did Costa Mesa chooee Its
weed abatement contractor thl1
year? No doubt by throwin, dart!
at the list of bidders. The work
this year is the worst I've seen in
my 14 years or residence ln this
fine town. Can 't the city find any-
one tol do better?
-M. S.
Tllll kllUrf, A'*"9 '""'"' \IMWt. .... 111<11s.1rfly ,._ If tllt ..,..,. • .,., tllMI
.,.,., Mt _..,_ "' e"'°"'' ... Ot11r Pl•.
our culture toward the three primary im·
pulses of the newborn and lfOWinl child
.... the oral, anal and 1e.nltal in that order
-contrasts worse than almoat anythlng
else about us with the tot a 1
permisslveneu, in regard to these same
impulses in chlldren, in more advanced
50Cietles, such as the Datives of
Okinawa."
It may aow>d strange to our ears to
hear Okinawa cited aa • "more ad·
vanced" couritry than ours; but it is part
of cur nation.al pride and prejudlct to
believe that because we have attained the
hq:hesi leveJ of technical and material
accompUahmeDt in the world, lhat
therefore we are s.imUarly superloi in our
aocia!, ethicaJ and sexual aUltudts.
A JOKE JS generally • form of anxiety·
release, and someUmea it iJ a UJefuJ and
necesaary form, as when aoldltts jest
before battle. But the dirty joke indicates
the amount of represaed anztety about
aer in our society; it is a mark of psychic
slavery, not of freedom.
Our abift1ng se1u~l standards wtµ no
doubt drift too far into Julty before Ibey
a.re corrected, but I believe the 1ener11
tendency Is a healthy one, and that out of
the chaos and confusion there will come a
more realistic and more humane con·
ception of sexuality in our society than
v.·e have yet permitted ourselves to im·
agine -except through the distorted and
distorling medium of the dirty joke.
Elders Have Job to Do
Excerpt! from a statement by Wil-
liam K. Coblentz of Son fronci!co, o
member of the University of Califo1·-
nia: Board of Rege11ts, as published hi
the June 16 issue of Vniutr.tiiy Bul-
letin:
"We elders have a job to do in fulfillin g
our obligations of public trust. We cannot
\Vail for the young to accept without
quesUon our ideas and our policies for
time is running against us. We cannot
really try to outwit or out n1aneuvcr
t)lem because if we do a new generation
v:llJ appear and take their place trained
by those \\'e have terrporarily outwitted .
Jf we declare war, verbally or through
tactics of repres.'iion. society in many
aspects far beyond the university campus
Is affected.
''I PLEAD FOR understanding on both
.,.. . . ~
" .l ...
sides of lbe generation gull. The young
should try to understand that most of us
\Vant to imp rove society, not to destroy it
in the transparently unlikely hope or
making it better by making it worse. \\'e
elders have lo understand l hf
restlessness and ferment combined wtth
idealism among many of the young.
-"There are probably as m a n y
misdirected elders as young people and
as many virtuous ones in both camps. II
would be folly to Ignore the motivation.s
(Jf those bent on confrontation for con-
frontation's sake. It would be equally ir-
responsible if we did not recognize gooJ
faith when It is evident."
,-,.~~~~~-~Bu George-~----~--.
Dear George:
You're always poking fun at ad-
vice columnists. Doesn't thi s make otbcr advice columnists angry and
... areu't you worried?
B.S.
• Dear B.S.: ' H09f in the world do you think ad·
otoo """"'"I: '""'Id find out 1 • -OliidiiC ol them! You don't
'.. lldftk us od¥1ee "'lumnlsts •dually
• rad -IJllap, do 1out
• DMr oearee: • -~ I -.-I"" 1 letttt from my
"
son who Is in the Marines. He say,
he lost his la st m0oth '1 p.c:y gamhl·
ing in a game or poker with Jl.1arlne
noncoms. Are t.1arine noncoms
allowed to gamble with rookies?
E.A.
Otar E.A.:
Y.'hen Marine noncoms play
poker with bootl, they aren't
gambllng.
(Send your most puzzling pro-
blems to Georee -they hel,P him
pass the time in his maximum·
seeurity ward.)
them -like to take picks on budget increase&, a look
at some of the intereoUng ways in wh,ich John Q. and
the couple next door spend their protection money is
ravealint. Here are some of the police log entries in
011e.recent u.bour perlod:'--
-Quarrellng drunk couple requested marital coun·
seling.
-Baseball broke window on Shalimar Drive .
-Woman wanted a b sen t neighbor's backyard
aprinlder, flooding her lawn t~rned oU. Patrolman ob·
served large, unfriendly doc. Left note on door advising
neighbor of Oooding problem.
-Elderly lady reported "Peace" painted on side·
walk.
-Merchant on 191.h street in dispute with customer
over payment for 10-cent ice cream cone.
Based on the average hourly policeman's wage,
plus time on call, just that one dime ice cream cone
cost John Q. and other taxpayers 79 cents.
Practical Plastic Grass
Hippies -whatever they are or were -decried the
so-called plastic society during their brief heyday, with
an element of truth in its application to values but not
necessarily to things.
, Not everyone accustomed to the budding green
shoots of spring along the Orange Coast may like the
idea of plastic grass.
But Costa Mesa city oUtciaJs are admittedly en·
thused over the idea of initiating a program ot plantin~
Monsanto Chemical Company's AstroTurf in rugged·
duty areas requiring landscaping.
A preliminary allotment of $25,000 is in the city
budget for beginning during the coming year. No water·
Ina or mowing is needed and the plastic grass has more
than proved its aesthetic and practical value as a worth·
while investment around the country.
'Free pres:;! Mun, we don't euen believe in free speech!'
ICI
When President .Jolansota Halted Bombing •••
Three-point 'Understanding' Existed
WASHINGTON The N I r 0 n
Administrauon hu Informed Conareu
that a three-point "understanding" wlth
North Vietnam did exist, unwritten but
,;uJte explicit, when President Johnson
hailed Uie bombing of the North last Octobe,.,...
The Secretary of Defense, Melvin R.
Laird, gave that unequivocal uaurance
in closed-door teaUmony late in March .
Laird said the understanding was one of
the ground rules In existence when be to-
ok over the Pentagon a month earlier.
The secretary said he had discussed the
matter personally with his Johnson
Administration predecessor, Clark Clif·
ford. He te!ltUled that he had al&O talked
about it with Cyrus · Vance, the John-
Administration's number two negotiator
at the Paris peace talks.
LAIRD SAID Vance told him there wa.s
an understanding that. if the bombing of
North Vietnam were halted, "three basic
points" would be followed :
-No operations carried on by North
Vietnam through the demilitarized zone,
the DMZ.
-Major population centers in South
Vietnam would not be "indiscriminately"
aUacked with rockets or bombs.
South Vietnamese government
spokesmen would be assured a voice ln
the Paris peace talks.
Laird stressed that the understanding
was "not in writing." He left no doubt.
however, that such an understanding had
been entered into with the North Viet·
namese .
The secretary is also reported to have
ouUined just how, as be understa nds it ,
the arrangement t!ame into being .
VANCE, TOO -After Laird's
testimony. and perhaps as a result or
hearin& about the secretary's flat and
positi1•e statements about the previously
.speculaUve understanding, members of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
began asking questions.
Finally, Chairman J. William Ful-
bright O.Ark., asked the State Depart-
ment for information on the reported
underatanding. Apparently the Nixon
State Department enlisted the help or
Johnson negotiator, Vance, to elaborate
on the touchy matter.
Jn any event. Vance came to
Washiugton from his New York City
headquarters on May 15th. He discussed
the understanding, at some length, wiUt
Fulbright and some of his colleagues in
Fulbright's private office.
The substance of the understanding, as
Vance then oullined it, was just as Laird
had described it: No DMZ attacks, no in·
discriminate shelling of cities. and South
Vietnamese spokesmen would have a role
in substantive talks in Paris.
NO VERBATL\.1 transcript was taken
of Vance':i. statements in Fulbright's of·
fice. though a memo wa_s prepared later
front notes. Laird was testifying on the
record. however, and a declassified
ve rsion of his remarks will presumably
ht made public in due course.
That rr.ay well produce some flap, both
here and in Paris.
After the bombing halt. of course, the
rocket attacks on South Vietnam popula·
lion centers were resumed. There were,
according to U.S. commanders, repeated
violations or the demilitarized zone by the
North Vielnamesc.
Therefore, Laird's forthright comments
will almost certainly be challenged by the
Communist side In Paris, and the ex-
istence of any understanding at all,
denied vehemently th ere.
HERE IN THE United States, publica-
tion of Laird 's statemenU will lend itself
to a different sort of controversy. It may
well contribute to the already mounting
criticism of President Nixon by the usual
anti-war critics and by others.
Vance's former boss, Ambassador
Averell Harriman, has already joined in
that criticism. Others, especially the
Democrc:tic "doves" in Congr~ss are get-
ting ready to do so vigorously now that
President Nixon has called them the new
isolationists.
They will havi;. a new and open avenue
for their comPla1nts when it is officially
confirmed that there was, in the dying
days of the Johnson AdlllinistraUon, an
understanding with the CommunJs.t .side
with regard to a certain de-escalaUon of
the fighting.
Critics will surely dismiss the Pentagon
claim, that the North Vietnamese reUrtd
only t.o regroup for an attack again this
spring. They \Vill be asking why Nixon,
like Johnson, has been unable to expand
and broaden the understanding reacher!
last fall.
Confused Concept of What Guilt Is
By GEORGE R. HOFF, Ph.D.
Much of our behavior is based upon a
contused concept of what gullt ls, and
what Jt means. We've learned to feel
guilty when we violate moral, ethical or
religious principles: and we're motivated
lo do the right thing iri order not to feel
guilt. When we do the right thing. we feel
guilt-free and this improves our 'ielf·
cstecn1.
But being intelligent, we often use this
concept of guilt self-protectively, by mak·
ing it work for us and against others. We
turn il into a "security shield''
""'hich protects us and helps make sense
out of our otherwise perpleXing conduct.
avoid feeling it.
Real guilt is not based upon what wr
have done wrong. \Vrong action produces
feelings of 1b1me. Real guilt stems from
a feeling or not having done enough; it
belon1s to the unfulfilled wish, not the a(-
tion. However, contrar:· to what Jesus
said, we tend to place more value on ac-
tion than upon intention.
THE NE UROTIC use,, guilt to evade
action. The psychologically healthy per-
son realizes his guilt when he hasn't acted
according to his true and total inner at-
titudes and intentions. The neurotic uses
Irresponsibility as an excuse; the healthy
person is guilty v.'hen he is irresponsible.
ll may be seen. therefore, that real
guij\,.-is part of everyone's charac!er
stru cture: it ca nnot be a\·oided. We are
all guilty because none of us has evf'r
done enough in every situation : 1ve
ha ven't fulfilled our intentions or polen·
lia l. Pare nthetically, shame i5 also an
clement of our character makeup,
beca use everyone has done something
wrong according to our, or someone
clse·s, standard s.
ACCEPTING REAL guilt and shame
helps to remiild us or our humanness and
to Jive with our deficiencies. Not ac-
cepting them may lead to the defensive
use of neurotic guilt to feed the delusion
that actions are more important tlian in·
tentions. Real guilt is not a problemi
neurotic guilt is.
Jn fact , real guilt is beneficial because
It helps keeP: us honest with ourselves.
Neurotic guilt, on the other hand , is self·
deceptive and self-defeating, and detracts
us from knowing ourselves.
Each of us must distinguish our real
from our n(!l.Jrotic feelings of guilt.
Sometimes professional help is required
to untangle :b~ web of feelings, but of~en
ti realization of differences between the1n·
can help us live with ourselves .nore
peacefully.
\VE SHI ELD ourselves by disavowing
responsiblllly for our r.ctions and, in·
stead. blame our conscience. ~n.rpere.;o,
value system, sense of right and wrong,
etc. For example. to say "I won't cheat
on my spouse because I'll feel guilty
about doing it." implies th11t II is our
guilt. rather than ourselvt1, which makes
the decision to remain fa ithful.
Opposes Upper Bay Land Swap
Interestingly, institutions such as the
government. church, and education hc!p
perpetuate the delusion that it is '>ad
behavior that is wrong, not us .. Whnl
must be remembered is that institutions,
pe.r se, are concerned with their prin-
ciples more than with the people they
represent. When a church, for exampl~.
insists that its members act according to
certain prescribed rules, it infers that the
person who is behaving is less important
than the !>ehavior.
AND IT FOLLOWS that if a person
UkS a church -or some other lnstitution
-as the final authority which dlspen~s
truth for a price. he buys guilt in order to
Quotes
A•Hrablymaa Floyd W11cefleld, lfun·
tJa,... Pitt -"Those who stll
dangerous drugs to a minor. or anyone
elae, are in the category of one who
would murder. and ahouki be made to
pay !or their crime."
To the Editor :
One thing about the Upper Newp:irt
Bay land exchange I-hat not very man y
people understand is ""hat they are get·
ling in their 4SO county acres whose ap-
praised value is $19 million. Two hundred
seventy-six of these acres (60 percent),
va lued at $14 miltion, are as a condition
of the trade to be dredged to a depth of
10 feet. \Ye aren't getting land at all .
Fourteen of our $19 million are non-ex·
istcnt at the close of the trade.
BY CONTflAST, all of the Irvine Com-
1Xtny's 157 acres arc there and prime
waterfront property as well, worth not
less than $100 million after the trade. In
addition. 120 or the county's acres are nrit
on the waterfront and unnecessary for
the development of a ba y. We arc left
with 54 acres at the muddy rear of llle
bay "'here S\vimming would be poor ard
sand kir the proposed beach would have
to be imported and renewed as it washed
away.
IF TRE PROPOSED p<n!nsula should
r.rove to be Infeasible rrom an engineer·
ng point of view. &he public Is left with
approximately 30 acres of undesireble
re.al estat.ei This is not In my opinion
worth the destruction of a besuti.fu l bay
by dredging ud filling, poor planninc.
----------------
r
;\'failbox
Letters f rom readers aTt welcontt.
Nonnatly WTite rs should convty the ir
11'lessages in 300 woTds or less . The
right to candense letttTS to fi t .space
or eliminate tibel is restrotd. AU 1.et-
t.crs must include stgnaturt ond mail-
ing address, but ·namts may bt wilh-
htld on reque sl if su/ficit·nt rtaso1l
is apparent.
h~ck of fore sight and neglect or the facl
th11t water resource1 like this are a rarity
in Soulhcrn California.
MRS. CARL W. COTMAN
Hil1shaw's Stirtemet1t
To the Editor:
Thanks for the publicity on tht front
page of the· DAILY PILOT concemina the
'meeting of CHART In IJosll MQa . It '!'a1
very good lo read the statement by
Andrew Hinshaw, &bet the eppraltal for
assessment on the land was obviously a
directed appraisal.
I owe this letter to you, tor J wrote
before, commenting that I felt we were
not gett lng the coverage we should.
I think tiitrs. Frank Robinson of
Newport Beach is indeed a plucky person.
She and Mr. Robinson apparently are
having to fight the Irvine Company, the
Board of Supervisors and the State Lands
Commission in this unholy land exchange.
FERN Z!MMERMAN
---iW-
Friday, June 27, 1969
Tiie editoriol page of the Daily
Pilot .1eek1 to inform and 1tim-
1dott readers btt prtse11ti110 tlti1
n~wspaf)tr's opinion-s nnd corn-
tntntaru on topics of in,ereat
and significance, bv providi1ig a
forum for tlit erpre1.sion of
our readtr.t' opi nions, ct11d bu
prtsantiJtg the diverse view-
Poin ti of in/Qf'm4d obstrver1
and spokes·men on iopic.t of tilt
day .
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
. ..
I •
• '
'
r'
Alioto: Some Prote·sts
Should B~ Encouraged
By TOM BARLEY
Of f!M Deltl' '""' lteff
Dissent on CalifornJa's campuses
should be encouraged aDlj not suppressed
provided that student objections are voic-
ed within a formula that is clearly ac-
ceptable to the vast majority of them,
Sa:l Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto said
Thursday in Anaheim.
"Our students demand and deserve to
have a sllare in decisions that can mean
the .shaping of their lives and the nature
of their future role in our society," the
volatile civic leader told hls Town Hall
audience.
"They are intense, involved, tremen-
dously dedicated and afire with lhe
reforming zeal that we, with our
determination to provide the. highest
education in the world, have injected into
them," he said.
"But let's not knock it," urged .the man
who is, in all but announcemeflt, Gov.
Ronald Reagan's opponent in the 1970
gubernatorial election. "Let's encour3ge
ft provided that we get home to tfiem -
and, believe me, it's a troth they
acknowledge -the fact that those pro-
tests must be contained wilhln the limits
of a Constitution lhat Js the most revolu·
tlonary uµng af its kind in the world."
'FAIR BEARING'
Alioto held up the quelling of dissen.l at
San Francisco State College as "a prime
example of what can be achieved with
the activation of mediating machinery
that is geared to a fair hearing of boU1
sides of the dispute."
He lauded the San1 Francisco police of-
ficers who moved in on the troubled Bay
City campus as "working within the very
framework that I'm advocating today -
the unassailable theory that violence
should only be put down with force just
sufficient to contain that violence."
If that kind of theory ''and the will to
really consider student demands tpat
were, by and alrge, more . t h a n
reasonable" had been applied a t
Berkeley, Alioto said, "there would have
been no need for "bayonets, buckshot and
aerial gas attack."
Students want and should have a say in
matters of curriculum, administration,
planning and enforcement of rules. Alioto
said. "They will not be brushed off." he
CIAILY l'ILOT Sl10 l'Mi.
HUNTINGTON'S MAUREEN MEADE FAST ON HER FEET
Spiked Shoe• and Dreams of the 1972 Olympics
Ca11't Ru11
Girl Track Star Needs Air Fnre
By TERRY COVILLE
01 l~t 01i11 PilOI Stiff
Youiig Jl,laurccn J\1eade -she's only 14
-has a pair of spiked track shoes she
would like to put to use July 2 in Dayton .
Ohi o.
But Maureen, a Huntington Beach
speedster, has a problem . She needs
money ror air fare.
About $200 would insure llunlington
Beach 's youngest track star of a place in
the mile relay of the AUU \Vomen's Na-
tional track meel. July 2-5 in Dayton.
Maureen, who can run almost as fa sl
as she can fla sh a smile, competes v.'ith
the Long Beach Comets, a collection of
women tracksters of all ages guided by
coach Dave Pearson.
She and three teammates hold the third
besl time (4 :03.0) in the nation for the
women·s mile relay. The national record
is 3:51.2.
A1aureen also keeps a pretty good pace
in the 440, and if she can beat 00 seconds
in a meet ton ight , she has a chance to
run in the 440 or the AAU girls' division.
}!er best current 440 time is 00.7.
SURPRISE
Her three-mile relay teammates, with
440 times, are Elaine Hanson (59.7) 16,
of Long Beach: Carole Goya (fl9.9), 18. of
Redlands, and Kim Atllesey (59.2). 15, or
2012 Nautilus Ave., ~e"'port Beach.
Stanton Company
Wins Cont1·act
A Stanton construction company Thurs-
day was awarded a $261,670 tow bid con-
tract for construction of a LS.mile widen·
Ing project along Beach Boulevard in
north Orange County.
Coxco Associates Inc.. 7002 Katclla
Ave., was assigned the job of increasing
J-Ughway 39 to four lanes between
Anahehn and Buena Park .
Tbe State Division or Highwa ys award-
ed another S00,694 contract ror a Ventura
County job Thursday in Los Angeles.
The young ,Huntinglon Beach flash has
been qu ite a plcasanl surpri:i;c to her
coaCh. Maureen started runnins: track on·
ly last January when she competed in a
cross country women's race sponsored by
lhe city at Murdy Park.
Following another ,.,.omen's cross coun·
lry race iR Westminster. with a second
place showing. Maureen was asked to
work out 11•ilh the Comets. Her ad -
vancement has since been rapid.
Dreams of the 1972 Olympics in
Munich. Germany, now flutt er in
Maureen's head as she pulls on her bright
red track unifonn .
"I didn 't even think I'd be going to tbc
AAU championships," says a rather shy
track star, "but coach thinks we have the
best chance in the mile relay ."
Her mile relay team was put together
only rece ntly, and it hit the fast markin
the Mt. San Antonio College Relays in
May.
Two divisions will be run at lhc AAU
chanipionships : girls, for those 14·18, and
women's for anyone \vho can keep the
pace. Maureen will run the mile relay in
the women 's division, and if she can
qualify, the 440 in the girls' division.
1 OTHER ATHLETES
Her dad. Robert Meade. Is a postman
in Los Alamitos. and in addition, to
Maureen. has seven other growing
athletes. which puls quite a strain on the
family budge.t when it comes to jet fare
to Ohio ..
Monday night City Allomey Donald
Bonfa will ask the city council to help
support Maureen's effcnts. Meade said he
would appreciate he 1 p from anyone to
send his daughter to the AAU meet.
"I was kind of amazed when she began
running so fast," said the elder Meade,
''but I'm glad she's doing il.'1
Evtry day Maureen leaves ber house at
7701 Rhine Drive, to head for aftemoon
practices in Long Beach. "Arter the AAU
meet some of us will work out on iodoor
tracks for the winter season," says the
•runUngton Beach girl. "and later maybe
we'll go to Germany."
But right now Oeyton. Ohio, would be
far el'IOUgh.
warned, ••and it's about ti.me that \Ye
recognhed lttis and invited and welcomed
their participation in the conduct of our
school systems."
But that recognition of students' rights
must include the students' recognition
that their <tissent must only be within the
bounds of established law and order,
Alioto added.
NOT BADJCALS'
"Our children are not con1munists,"
the mayor said. "Whatever we hear and
read, they are not the rabid radicals that
many of us fear they have become. If
many of you bad talketl to them as I have
you would find, as I did, that they are
young people desperately trying to
achieve recognition and a voice jn cam-
pus affairs and more than willing to do it
within the bounds of Jaw and order.
"And most of those young people have
lhe highest respect for the Coiistitution
we're always throwing af them," Alioto
added. ''They are not being led by Che
(Guevara of Cuba) or Peking in
allegiance to a doctrine that is as foreign
to them as it is to us."
Alioto urged adoption of "programs in-
volving the use of professional Jaw en-
forcers, officers especially skilled in their
control of campus disturbances. "These
men," he said, ·~would seek out the Black
Panthers, SOS leaders, dope pushe rs,
cons and hoodlums who are at the heart
of many of the disturbances.
':This should and must be done," he
said. "But we must not blame spirited
youngsters, afire wilh a ieal that must be
strangely familiar lo us, for taking us off
our warm and cozy seats and making us
think a little longer and detper than we
have been accustomed to doing."
'ILL ADVISED'
"Let us pick out -and, I can assure
you, they are pretty easy to pick out -
these hard liners and put them behind
bars where they belong," Alioto said.
"And let me tell you this as a result nf
my own experience in working for a
resolution of the San Francisco State
disorders -hard liners rally support
almost in direct ratio to the force with
which basic student aspirations are
repressed or suppressed.''
Alioto made no direct reference to Gov.
Reagan in his fonnal Town Hall speech
but he earlier condemned the governor's
actions at Berkeley as "ill advised and
·ttifiammalory. •·
He particularly castigated Reagan's
defense of the use of a helicopter which
sprayed gas over much of the campus
and into the surrounding community and
hospital. "That action and his seeming
endorsement of it did a lot of damage to
community-student relations," he said.
"The revolution that confronts us today
is not a campus revolution ," he said. "It
is a social revolution born of the exciting
times we live in and a preface to our
recognition of the right of young people to
have a voice in our nation's affairs."
County Airport's
Air Museum Open
Again Saturday
The Movieland of the Air Museum will
reopen at Orange County Airport Salur·
day at JO a.m. after extensive remodel·
ing.
The museum will feature 40 cxllibits
and alrcrafl from motion pictures and
television.
Frank Tallman, president of Tallmantz
Aviation Inc., stated that there will be
construction sets ant? mock11ps used from
motion plctur:? filming.
Another feature of the nl!w air museum
\Viii be film strips depicting the planes
flown by Tallmantz stunt pilots in
movil!s ..
Each weekend the museum will fly
the actual planes shown on film strips
for al llhe visitors to see, In addition,
the museum will feature barnstorming
rides in historic airplanes at the nearby
airport.
Tallman noted that ''photG bugs will
again be able to photograph some df the
world's truly historic airplanes in their
proper setting."
Artesia Freeway
Section Opened
The newest section or the Artesia
Freeway, a four-mile stretch between
Artesia Boulevard in Cerritos and Beach
Boulevard in Buena Park was open to
trdffic Thursday.
TI1e new segment wa!! officially
dedicated June 6 by state, county and Ci·
ly officials.
The next section of the freeway , Crom
Beach Boulevard to lht Santa .&.ua
Freeway at the Interchange .owlth the
Riverside Freeway in Fullerton 1 is
scheduled to be completed in one year.
County Journalis111
Grad to Be Cited
Paul Attncr of Westminster, Cal State
Fullerton journalism graduate. is one of
117 students nationwide 10 receive a clta·
tion of achievement from Sigma Delta
Chi professional journalism M>Clety.
Attner, of 16912 Lava \Vay. in
Westminster, has taken a job with the
Washiftilon Post.
--~-----~--------
'~d>J, Junt 27, 1'69 • s DAil V I'll.Of
Bubbling Vp in Seal Beach
New Seal Beach reserv6ir on Beverly Manor Road
just off San Diego Freeway has inflated ~roof re-
sembling giant bubble: Plastic covering is kept
inflated by blowers which supply air pressure. New
reservoir is part of city's $800,000 water improve-
ment project.
John Wayne Calls
Critic Rosenthal
Publicity Seeker
Actor John Wayne of Ne\vport Beach
Thursday called Rep. B e n j a m i n
Rosenthal (D-N.Y.), a "publicity seeker''
and said the Pentagon was "more than
careful" in billing him during production
of "The Green Berets."
Wayne said the $18,623.64 he 1vas
charged was not a token payment but the
exact amount it cost to use government
equipment that could not be obtained
elsewhere.
The actor said his Ba~jac Productions
Inc. also spent $171,000 to build a camp
Clll the base used by the Army after the
filming was finishW. The company also
paid $305,000 for extras for 70 days of
shooting, 80 percent of which went to off·
duty army personnel and their depen-
dants, Wayne said.
"I think this publicity seeker had better
check his rigures and know what he's
talking about," Wayne said. "Herc he's
belittling one of the only films l know
about that's: expressly been making
Americans appear heroes around th e
world."
Rosenthal has criticized the Pentagon
for permitting Wayne to use faciliUes at
F'L Benning, Ga. for the controversial
film.
Gals Get Chance in Next
P etersonBarbershop P o~l
He couldn't get the Orange County
Board of Education to approve it Thurs-
day, but county school Superintendent
Robert Peterson says he is going to go
ahead anyway and ccnduct another
barbershop poll .
And to accommodate those who
criticized him last time for not including
women he is going to conduct his survey
in beauty parlors, too.
The county board spilt down the mid -
dle, 2, to 2, Thursday on whether to ap-
prove Dr. Peterson's new venture into
what he calls scientific opinion sampling.
Giving him the green light were Clay
Mitchell of South Laguna and Or. Dale
Rallison of Santa Ana.
Voting nay were Donald Jordan, of
Garden Grove, and Pat Arnold, of
Cypress. The fifth board seat is presently
vacant.
Peterson wanted the county board to
appropriate money for the survey but
when he couldn't gel a majority he said
he would take the money out of his own
county schools office budget.
The cost of the survey which purports
to sample scienUflcally different econom·
ic levels and dlCferent parts of the county
and provide, Peterson said, 20 times as
much county coverage as a typical state
or national poll, he estimated at less than
$100.
The poll will be conducted in August.
Peterson plans to include que$tions on
such subjects as drug abuse, student
unrest, vandalism, teacher strikes, tut.
lion fo, fii8;her educaton, discipline ltf.i>-
dards and support for educational pro-
gral'l}s in Jaw and order. -
Peteuoh said a question on family life
and sex education possibly will be m.
eluded. -;
Such a question \Y8s included In the
first barbershop poll Peterson took last
fall wlthoul board knowledge. "Re
withheld results from the board ·for
several months because he said results
might prejudice hearings on sex edaca·
tion being conducted by the board.
Auaheitu l\1arine
Killed in Vietuau1
A list of 55 U.S. servicemen killed in
the Vietnam War during the past week
shows five Californians, including a
Marine from Anaheim.
· He was identified as Lance Cpl.
Richard A. Weil Jr., son of Mrs. Anna
Upton, of 908 S. Bruce St., according io
the Defense Department.
~your 9 • •
•
DODOE
$50,000,000*
CLEIRlllCE
SILE
HARBOR DODGE
2111 HAhoR BlVD.
COSTA MESA-540·1111
...Are JOU
a Charger?
Prices are alaahed on every 1969 Dodge Car
and Truck. Trades are up .•• term•.,.. yours
to make. Even demonstrators and executive
modal• are on the block. So get your 1hal'tl
of the savings today .•• whlle they last.
BEACH CITY DODGE
16555 BEACH BLVD. (Hwy. l9)
HUNTINGTON BEACH-147-9631
---------------------------~--------
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--.:.---~ ---·-~-----
IAll.Y I'll.OT
Police said Ibey captured a bur-
glary suspect red-handed -and
bare-botUxned -outside a liquor
stme in Chicago. An !&-year-old
was charged with burglary after pollc!' watched him slide down an
ice chute in front of the stor~ corn·
pletely naked. Authorities said the
youngster told police he removed
his clothes to climb through the ice
chute into the liquor store on the
Soathwest Side to get ice for a pic-
nic. •
Now that tum.mer'• here 5-11ear-old
Jana FainmJU:e hcl lots of time to
blow bubblu. But it lookl like 1he
weed& some practice .since Mr bub-
blu Mther floo.t nor: pop, but sim-
ply gtick to the pipe. • The East St. Lows, lll, City
Council gave in to pleas by city
jail prisoners for soul food . The
prisoners, mostly Negroes, will
start getting ham h<>el<s and black·
eyed peas and such under a con-
tract awarded to Mary's Kitchen, a
Negro.owned restaurant. A11t. Po.
lice Chief J . Cedoll Mosley support-
ed. the change, saying the previous
caterer was "not providing the
service or the quality or quantity
of food necessary to insure some
peace and hannooy in the jail." •
Vickie arrlve1 by chaufftrtd
car at Suztttt's Groomttte onct
a month. Sht Qtff tht $8 special
including a ~cure, a hair I kter;up with sptcial "&tarltss''
shampoo and a coiffure. Vickie
ii the presidential poodlt. Every
hair is iaved when she gets htr
p o mp o m trimm-td, Cuttomtr.t
and t'Mmbers of the staff keep 1 thtm as soU1Mnirs. Ont wo-, man's JIOUngster reportedl11
' took a bagful to school for
~ "•how and &tU" time. "VS•e j
• Their marriage anthem: "Take
Me Out to The Ballgame." Two
bu.ses. containing 70 members of a
church group pulled into a road·
ride park so two of its members,
Wilbur Page, 57, and Dorothea
Willl•nu, 36, could get married.
Both live in Bellevue, Mich. The
Rev. William Brown performed
the ceremony and all 70 fri ends
signed the marriage certificate.
Then, the group continued the jour-
ney to Detroit to see a baseball
game. The trip had one unhappy
segment. The Tigers lost.
rr1c1a1. Junt 27, 1'69
Dirben, AMA Win
Finch Gi ves In,
•
Drops Knowles
WASHING TON (UPI) -H E W
Secretary Robert H. Finch today
1'\'lllally dropped hi& m-monlh effort to
h~ve Dr. Johll H. Knowles of Boston
named to the federal govenunen\'1 top
helltb post.
Finch said he deep\)' regretted the
situation and lhe fact that the depart-
ment of health, education and welfart
Will be deprived of the services of
Knowles whom he described u "this
outstanding leader in the field of health
care."
Finch referred to "protracted an«
distorted discussion" regarding the ap
poinbnent.
The K n o w I e s appointment, recom
mended by Finch lo President Nixon, had
become embroiled in a swirl of con·
troversy. with Senate Republican leader
Stores Guarded
For R ock y Vis it
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Police rein.
forcements today guarded the remaining
stores in a Rockefeller-run supermarket
chain firebombed in protest to the im·
pending visit of New York Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller.
Guards were etationed at 350 other
American-owned finns.
In a nationwide wamlng Thursday
night Interior Minister Francisco lmaz
said the government would "keep order
at any cost" when Rockefeller arrives.
Tiny incendiary b o m b s hidden in
t.ootbpaste boxes, tin cans and other
receptacle11 destroyed six or the 21
Minimax grocery stores In and around
Buenos .~es early 1bursday, police said.
'-._...
')lie'• Miss Wool
1'~rankie Mitchell of Salen1
Va., bursts into tears and
laughter as she is named Mis!!
\Vool of An1erica at the 12th
annual pageant in San Angelo .
Tex.
Everolt (\I. DJrtoon and the American
Medical ~lion leacttn1 tbe op. pootUon.
Knowles had appeared almool certain
of gellina tbe nomlnalloa esrller la the
week, but tbe slluaUoo dJanpd during
hehlnd-lhwcenes msneuverla( the put
two days.
Finch, In a slalemenl blued by bis o(.
fleti at I a.m. PDT after congreaionaJ
sources reported Knowles bad been
dumpe<_I, said he had informed the Boetoo
hospital administrator that I.be con-
lroversy had created a situaUon "in
\\'hich he would not be able to function ef-
fectively."
Finch's statement, as given lo
reporters (Finch did nol appear):
"I have reluctantly and regretfully
decided and today advised Dr. John
Knowles that the protracted and distorted
discw.alon regarding his appointment 1s
auiltant secretary ha!: resulted in a
situation Jn which be would not be able to
runctlon effectively in this critical poai·
ti on."
Allies, Saigon
Ag ree on 1 Thing:
Talks Deadlocked
PARIS (UPI) -Allied and Commuoi!I
negotiators saJd today the Vietnam peace
talks were completely deadlocked. Both
sides said the 23rd session of the negotia-
tions failed to make any progress.
Communist delegates said time is run·
nlng out for America in the war. '1'1.me
is definltely not on the aide of Mr. NiJ:.
an," sakt a spokesman for the North
Vietnamese delegation.
The spokesman rtferred to statements
made recently by President Nllon n·
preMing hope of withdrawing more than
100,000 U.S. troops by the end of next
year.
"Mr. Nixon ii trying to create false
hope to aS!Uage the rising current of
public opinion against him ," t be
spokesman said.
American de.lgation spokes1111n Harold
Kaplan said the Communists had firmly
entrenched themsel ves in 1 posilion of
non-negoUaUon.
''We have spelled out in detail every
area in wh.ich the two sides might be able
to make progress in peace negotiations -
prisoner of war exchanges. dilcusaion of
the 1954 Geneva Accords, the dem.UJtariz-
ed zone -, but unfortunately we have
heard no exptt.Uion of interest from the
Communist side,'" he Aid.,
"They seem to require a total Com-
munist victory as a precondition for
negotialion, as if anything would then be
left to negotiate," Kaplan said.
Kaplan in Thursday's session said the
Communi.st.! "made it clear they are not
willing to negotiate."
A Viet Cong delegate said one reason
for the.lack of progress was the Allied re-
jection of Communist demands for a
coalition government in Saigon.
The Viet Cong reiterated its demand
that the present Saigon administration be
ousted before any agreements could be
made, claiming the support of the "peo-
ple In the clU.. ol Sooth Vlelnam."
"We support the demands of the
population of the cities of South Vietnam
when they demand the replacement of
tbe Thieu-Ky-Huong puppet regime with
government by peace," said the spokes-
man.
The Americans have made it clear they
·ire prepared to play the waiting game.
.. We are ready to stay here until the
"hairs are worn out," chief American
ctegate Henry Cabot Lodge said
recently.
Lodge said after Thursday's sessions "I
regret to state I C<luld discern no wln-
1ngness to negotiate on their (the Com·
munists') part.''
Ill Wind Blows No Good
Sto rm Downs Trees, P ower Lines iii I llirwis
Tem per tltt&res
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'odlY ~ fw • awer IJll IO'W co1u111
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cot.rel MDUrt!a!n 11-1-lnllond per-.
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mo11tly 911nl!Y In 1ri.,.,_,1 IOlll Y t nd
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WILL PAY YOU
•
FOR EVERY
-
YOU SAVE '
GUAUllnED GIOWTH ACCOUllT
Anaheim Savings guoronlt•s o 5.25•/; annual lnt•r..I rate, campoartCteCI
doily. You'll 90m $30 for •v•ry $100 you'°" in our GuorcrntMd Growell
Account ;f occount is maintained fof 5 y90rs and Jnf9rell occnMot-.
Guaranteed Growth Accounts ore open•d with any a1M>Unt of $1,000 Of tr'IOf'e. High
earnings are also ovailabl• on 1hort•r t.lrm accounh of 3 or .C years. Alk for ll etals
an s1>9Cial withdrawal requir•menh.
5.250/o 5.380/o
GUAUllTIED lllCOME ACCOUNT IOIUS ACCOllll
Anaheim Savings Guaronte•d Income Account
9arn1 a guaranteed 5.25-/. annual ."Cite, cam·
pounded doily. Earnings will be paid to you
every quarter for the period you designat...-
3, .C. or 5 years. Oepolit any amount of
$1 ,000 or mo re. Aslr for details on special
withdrawal requirements.
On Bonus Accounts w. pay the 1 %'. cu"'*"
einnual rate t1ua"*'Y plus V.i %' annual '°'""
If hetd thrN years or longer. Accounts opeMd
for $1,000 or inort.
50/o
PASSBOOK ACCOUllT
You ~rn 5. 13 •/. annual yield when all ICl'f'Jngt
and interest remain a year ff the 51. current
onnuol tote i1 maintained and compounded doily
far a year. Interest is paid for oact day-in ta
t llact day.()uf, And, funds receWed by the 10th
of any month .arn from the ls! when they remain
on deposit until the end of the quarter.
At A.Mh1lm S1vln91 you tlrn the highesl 1ntt1"1 In the n1rioft; 1nl lrt
Insured up to $15,000 by ths Fedtr•I S1vlnp Ind l.Nn ln1unnce Corporetio11.
JOIN US
SEE AMATEUR RADIO OPERATORS CONTACT PEOPLE
THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
STATION K6SYU/6
The Anoheim Amateur Rodio Club will be operati ng liYt , •• fro111 OYt ma in effke
lobby. Jail\ us for o cup of coffee or punch and talk to people around th• world.
DAILY OPERATING SCHEDU LES July 1st -10th
11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
,
ANAHEIM SAVINGS
SINCE JSJJ
•
•
AND L.DAN ASSOCIATION
MAIN OFflCC
l t1 Wat Uncaln Av.. ,.,.,.,.1.,,, C•ll'°"'lt
l'ft. 2>1SS1
PREE CONV~IENT PA!ltK!NG AT Ar..L THREE LOCATION'
\IPI Tt'-'""'
AT RAINBOW'S END, ADORATION
Thousands Line Up for On• La1t Glance
Goodbye to Stai·
Tliousands File Past Judy
NEW YORK (AP) -ln
death as ii life, the
magnetism of Judy Garland
continued undiminished today,
drawing thousands of ad-
mirers through the nigh t ,and
into the morning to file pasl
her casket and bid goodbye.
"She's found th a t rainbow
now," Mary Roberts, a ro.
year-old typist said quietly
after gazing on the coffin lined
wiUl pale blue velvet. "I hope
she's finally got. some peace."
They queued up for as long
as two hours in the gray,
humid afternoon Thursday
before entering the chapel for
a last brief glimpse of the 47-
year-<ild actress who died Sun·
day in London of an accidental
overdose of sleeping pills.
''People identified with that
woman," said Mari1yn Ford,
33, a Queens housewife.
''Everyone's got sadness and
problems, everyone gets Ione·
ly. Judy Garland made all of
us reel something tied her and
us together."
At the scheduled midnight
closing there \vere 3 , O O O
persons waiting outside the
F'rank E. Campbell funeral
parlor on Madison Avenue at
East 8lst Street, and Judy's
husband, Mickey Deans, asked
that the doors be kept open.
Deans, who found Judy dead
In the bathroom of their
Chelsea cottage, also asked
that mourners be allowed into
the chapel until an hour and a
haU before the private funeral
service at I p.m.
Inside the fragrance of
flowers filled the air, In ad·
dition to a mass of formal
flo ral tributes many mourners
brought their own bouquets
and ptaced them on the pews.
Many men carried single
roses.
Miss Garland was dres.sed in
the silver lame wedding gown
in which she married Deans,
her fifth husband, th r e e
months ago. Silver slippers
with silver buckles we r e on
her feet.
A dozen feet £rom the coffin
was a large wreath of peonies
shaped like a rainbow -for
Judy's vocal signature, the
haunting "Over the Rainbow."
She first sang the song at
the age of 17 in the movie
"Wlz.ard of Oz." She played
the role of a waif, Dorothy,
convinced that happiness lay
just over th! rainbow.
Jn life. through her five
marriages and a career that
soared to great heights as well
as skirted the edge of show
business oblivion, the rain-
bow's end always seemed to
elude her.
James Mason. who appeared
opposite Miss Garland in "A
Star is Born," flew in from
Geneva, Swi tier I and, to
deliver the eulogy. The Rev.
Peter Delaney, who married
Deans and Miss Garland, wa s
to officiate at the private
services.
Following t h e Episcopal
will be buried in Ferncliff
funeral service, Miss Garland
Cemetery Mausoleum ,
Harlsdaie. N.Y., in
Westchester County just north
of New York.
Liberals Say Nixon
Weakening Vote Law
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Nixon's plan for
changing the 1965 law intended
to assure southern Negroes
the righ~ to vote has been at-
tacked by House liberals as a
delaying action which would
wraken the Jaw
The propo5al would extend
the voting Tights act to rover
all 50 states instead of the
seven Socthern states cur-
rently covered. It would ask
that literacy l:!sts be outlawed
as a qualification for voting
anywhere in the country.
But the proposal drew
criticism from some liberals
who said it would dilute the
Goldberg:
Save Sirhan
NEW YORK (AP)
Former Supreme Co u r l
Justice Arthur J. Goldberg has
written Gov. Ronald Reagan
or California asking com-
mutation of lbe death sentence
on Sirhan Blshara Sirhan,
assassin of Robert F. Ken-
nedy.
Noting that he himself had
been listed In Sirhan's diary as
11 n ~ssasslnatlon prospect,
Goldberg sald :
''The evolving standards or
decency lhat mark the pro-
gr6.9s or our society now con·
demn as barbaric and In-
human the deliberate in-
slltullonallzcd t a k I n f of
hum on Ille by the state.'
original emphasis on the
South. One section lhat was
attacked would strike the re-
quirement the seven deep
South states· get approval from
the U.S. Dislrk:t Court in
\\lashi ngton or from the: at-
torney general before they
change any of their local laws
affecting voting.
Rep. William f.1. McCullGCh
fR-Ohlo ), one of the key
Republicans who will be draf-
ting the bill, confirmed he was
amonf? lhtse who urged the
President to recommend a
simple extension of the civil
rights law rather than a
modification.
f.1cCulloch sat ln silence
Thursdav as Alty. Gen. John
N. Mitchell outlined Nixon's
p r o p o s e d mOOificatlons.
Liberal Democrats a n d
Republicans on the commllltt
dismissed them one by one as
sleP! backward.
Afterwards the white-haired,
nddy-faced McCuUoch. a
member of the Presldeot'1
Commission on CJvll
Disorders. pronounced Nixon'•
plan "a weaker votin.it rights
a.ct than an extension."
Meetings
,al DAY ,..,., \11111 "'-* \.l:ll:llof, ~le
fl!fl'U>ll, 1.1 15111 $!.. HIWllOft
kKti, 1:M 1.m, o...,.. ,_, lllcrr•I ... rdl MIMl!ll No.
15'. Huntr"th:ln lltlldl MHOftlC
l-""· Utt •• Pt~. IM!llllf"°"
&ttcll, P:.lO '·"'· N_.I AIN!ltllf" lhdlo Socltt'J,
Rt<,..•llen 8<1lldlfMr. 1111 ll•lboe
llvd., N•w0&r1 lltadl, I J,191, -Cl\tl1!1•n llin.1""""1ell'• tom1t1!!,.,.,
ll•fbol llY CIUb. NIWJGrt llt1~. 1:• ......
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ANAHEIM
H4 N. Euclid SJS.8121
Mon. thru Sot.
I 0 e.m. to. 9:30 p.m.
47
Mon.
' '~""· Jvnt 27. 1'169
'
SKINNY IS NEW, SKINNY
IS NOW: THE BODY-HUG
Long on cling, as lean as we 've seen, it's the slimmest
slither of shirting you can wear this seaso n. Pour yourself
into lhis knitty new length of Enkelure®' nylon by Weber
end close up the look with fourteen tiny buttons. Red,
navy, blue, gold, wine, white or black, sizes I 0-16, 11.00.
Ma il end telephone orders invited.
Blou ses, Shirts, 66.
'T.M . of American Enke Corp.
NEWPORT HUNTINGTON BEACH
DAILY !'!LOI'" 5
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Fo •hion ls/end 6+4-1212 7777 Edinger Ave. 892-333 1 ;.. ..
thru. Fri. I 0 e.m. to 9:30 p.m. Mon. thru Set. •• .,
Set. 10 e.m. to 6 p.m. I 0 o.m. to 9:30 p.m.
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• I DAILY PILOT EbITORIAL PAGE I
Life of a Lifeguard
\ I
Every morning 50 men pull on the red swim.ming
trunks of the Huntington Beach lifeguard division and
e ssume their a ssigned posts on I.he city's beach. Their
work is obvious, at least in part. They n1an the life·
guard towers and pull victims fron1 the oceans.
re!11ctloo for Huntin&ton Beach lo residents !rom all
paru ol Southern California and beyond the state's
borders.
I Another SUJlll1'er is \bare and another fine job can
be upteted from yur lifeaual'.dl.
IN
the [
that '
E"' liam
... mi
nia B
U.. I
le tin:
"W•
""'ol
wail
que&li
time
really u..m
wlll a1
by Ole U we
tactio
~
''J p
ti
.i :
D
• ...
But a lot n1ore is required of a man to be a ltfe.
guard. 1-te becomes something of a doctor. 1;ninis.t~ring
to. the minor wounds and burns of a population v1s1ting
the beach for a day. !-le returns stray youngsters to
their proper place. And the moment he pulls on that
pair of red trunks he becomes a public relations man
for the city of Huntington Beach.
The llarbors and Beaches Department requires a
Jot from its 90 employes. especiaUy ln the summer.
Before the man can become a lifeguard he under·
goes intensive training in rules and regulations, first
aid and just plain swimming. He must, above all •. be
In top physical condition. He must have stamina.
Thorough a\vareness of beach pr?blems i~ expected
from each lifeguard, and alertness 1s a reqwrement.
A lifeguard's post look s warm and secure when he
is in his to\ver on the beach. But at any moment he
may be expected to dive into the cold Pacific waters
10 grab a floundering swimm~r ~r. unluc~y surfer. As
many as 10 times a day, any 1nd1v1dual lifeguard may
i;ave a life.
Huntington Beach's cre\v doesn'.t stop working at
night either. Patrols arc. set up to g.1v~ round-the-clock
i;urveillance and protectJon of the city s ocean front.
To the hundreds of thousands who come to Hunt·
ington Beach each summer for the s~n. sand an~ surf,
the lifeguards are the natural extension of the city.
Their good work , proved over the years, is a proud
Dirty Joke , '
Has All But
'
Disappeared
ti ·'t'v.'ir-~;-... ~ .......... ---'
·~ I'\' SidnCly J. }Jarris
\
A colleague in the news room sent me a
brief tnter-of.fice memo not long ago :
.. The dirty joke has all but disappeared. I
seklom hear one. Two years ago. I en-
coonlered a couple a week. maybe more.
] st.ill meet lhe same guys with the same
frequency. No, no jokes." •
This has been my experience, too, and I
am glad. Not because. 1 object to dirty
jokes per se, but because not one in a
hundred was truly funn y -but you felt
vou had to laug h (at least weakly) lo
demonstrate your virility and good
fel)Dv.·ship. l think the rapid inC'reasc in sexual
permissiveness in the U.S. ~he last ~ew
)•ears has killed off the dirtj' Joke. A ~1rtr,
joke is basically a "react1on-fonnatJon
to scxuaJ repressiveness in a society; it
is not a normal outlet for humor.
!HANV SOCIETIES have not had any
dirty jokes, and would not understand or
appreciate them -nol because these
cultures are puritanical, but qui~ t~e o~
posite because they are perm1SS1ve 1n t~.e ~rea of sex. and find it in-
comprehensible that we smirk and snlg-
grr about a subject that lo them is as
simple and natural and obvious as
brealhing.
It is no accident that in Denmark last
year, \\•hen all censorship of pornograph-ic material was lifted. sale of pornogra-
ph1c lit.erature on newsstands dropped al-
most to the \•a nishing point.
IN HIS RECf.N·r book, "Rationale of
the Dir1 y Joke," G. Legman points oul
that "The alm ost total prohibitiveness oi
t
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Next time the majority four HB-
UHS trustees discuss the contro-
versial campus dress code, it
would be an interesting experiment
if they were required to wear
bell-bottom p a n t s, turtlenecks,
Apache scarves and other mod
garb to see how THEY function in
enforced apparel. -J. L. V.
TM~ INIUTe renectt r-1"1' ...... ... ~es~rflY .,,.,. « tt11 --· ,_ "tOUr Hf _ .... G'"'"' On. Dllltr Pt•.
our culture toward the three primary im·
pulses or the newborn and growing child
-the oral, anal and genital in that order
-coatrasts worse than almost anything
else about u8 with the t o t a I
permissiveness, in regard to these same
impulses in children, in more advanced
societies, sUch as the natives ol
Okinawa.''
It may sound strange to our ears to
hear Okinawa cited as a "more ad·
vanced" country than ours, but it is part
or OW' naUonal pride and prejudice to
believe that because we have attained the
highest level or technical and material
accomplishment in the world, that
therefore we are similarly superior in our
social, elhical and sexual aWtudes.
A JOKE IS generally a form of anxiety·
release, and IOllleUmes it iJ a use.tu] and
necessary form, as when soldler1 jest
before battle. But 'the dirty joke indicatt.s
the amount of repressed anxiety about
sex in our society; It ts a mark of psychic
slavery, not of freedom .
Our shifting sexual standards will no
doubt drift too far into laxity before they
are corrected, but I believe the general
tendency is a healthy one, and that out o(
the chaos: and confusion there will come a
more realistic and more humane con·
ceplion of sexuality in our society than
v.·e have yet permilled ourselves to im-
agine -except through the distorted and
distorting medium of the dirty joke.
Elders Have Job to Do
l!:xcerpts fro111. a statement by \Vit-
l iam K. Cob/111fz of Sa11 Francisco, a
tncmbrr <Jf !11r t r111l'('r$1l11 of Cali/or·
nio Board"/ Rrr1rn 1~. as published in
rhc J1111c 16 i~~ur of IJniversity Bul-
letin:
"\\le ciders havr 11 Jnb tn do in fu!lilhni;:
our obligalions of public lrusl. \Vt:! cannot
\\'ail for the ~oung to accept \\'i\hnut
question our idc<is ~nd our PQlicics for
lime is runninr. ;i~:un~I us. \\'r cannot
really try to (lu1w1t or out n1ancu\('r
them because ii \\'(' (!fl 11 new gen,,ration
"'111 appear and take lhc1 r place trained
hy those v.•e ha"c tem1>orarily ou1\\'illed.
If we declare v.•ar. \'t~rbally or throu~h
1acUcs of rcpre::.:.1on. ::.t..1tict~· in rnany
aspecls fa r beyond the 11111,crsit y c:lmpus
is affected.
"I PLEAD FOR undcr!;tanding on boll!
( • Cuest R<;porl
\ .
sides of the gene ration gulf. The young
should try to understand that most of us
v.·anl to improve society, not to destroy it
in the transparently unlikely hope of
1naking it better by making it worse . \\'e
ciders · ha"e to understand 1 ~ e
restlessness and ferment combined with
idealism among many of the young.
"There are probably as ma ., y
misdirected elders as young people and
as many virtuous ooes in both camps. It
would be folly to ignore the motiva tions
of th<JSe bent on confrootation for con-
rrontalion·s sake. It would be equally ir-
re~ponsiblc If we did not re~gnlze good
faith v.·hcn it is evld~l."
.---------n11 6eurge ---------,
Dear George:
You 're alv.'ays 1>0k1n~ fun al <it!·
vice columnists. Ooi:sn't 11Tis mAkc
othf:r advice columnlSts angry and
lltCn't ynu worried!
BS.
Dear e.s.,
How In the world do you think ad·
vice. columnist& would find out 1
wu matfna fun of tbtm? You don't
think U1 advice columnists actuilly
read these things, do you?
Dear Ceorae : I have received a letter fro,n my
I
I
son V>'ho is in the ti1erines. lie says
he Jos t his lasl month's pay gambl-
ing in a game O( poker \Vith tit11rinc
nonC1"1ms. Art r.torine noncoms
allov.cd to gamble with rookies?
E.A.
Dear L.A ·
\~'hen titarine noncoms play
poker with booLs, they aren't
gambling.
!Send your m~t puzzling pro-
blems lo r.eorge -they htlp him
p.,ss the lime in his maximum-
"curity v.·t1rd .)
They'll Be Missed
Announcement Monday that Jack Froggatt and
Stan Dorst will be leaving their posts with the 1'tunt~
ington Beach Co. and moving on to other assignments
with the parent company was met by co1nmunity lead·
ers with mixed emotions .
All are glad to see the two men progress and cer-
tainly their successors \Y1lliam E. Foster and Richard
J. t.1iescke will be most welcome. But Froggatt and
Dorst will be missed in the community.
Froggatt moves to the Whittier aree from a posi-
tion as general manager of the Huntington Beach Co.
During his five years here he has been a leader of the
Chamber of Commerce and active in most every pba~e
of community activity.
Dorst, who is leaving for San Francisco and a new
position in his company, was a Community Chest direc~
tor, Rotary Club member and president of the coun·
seling center as welJ as a strong voice for the rights
of all men to-live in peace together.
During the years these men have been in tht city
much good has been accomplished individually and by
their company. They leave this a better place for their
community service as well as their business activity.
'Free press ? Mwi, we don't e1xm belieue in free •peedz!'
s
When Pre•ldent .folln•o11 Halted Bombing •••
Three-point 'Understanding' Existed
WASHING TON The N l ll_ on
Administration has informed Congress
that a three-point "understand.Ins" with
North Vietnam did exist, unwritten but
..iuite ei:plldt, when President Johnson
halted the bombing of the North last
October.
The Secretary of De.fense, Melvin R.
Laird, gave that unequivocal assurance
in closed-door testimooy late in March.
Laird said the understanding wu one of
the ground rules in eiiatera w~ he to-
ok over the Pentagon a month earlier.
The secretary said be had dl.scus&ed the
matter personally with his Johnson
AdministraUo,, predecesaor, Clark Cllf·
ford . He testilied that he had also talked
about it with Cyrus v~. the JoJln-
AdministraUon's number two negotiator
at the Paris peace talks.
LAIRD SAID Vance told him there was
an understanding that, if lhe bombing or
North Vietnam were halted, "three ~c
pointa" would be followed :
-No operations carried on by North
Vietnam through the demilitarized zone,
the DMZ.
-Major population centers In South
Vietnam would not be "indiscriminately"
aUacked with rocke~ or bombs. ·
South Vietnamese government
sPokesmen woold be assured a voice in
the Paris peace talks.
Laird stttssed that the understanding
was "not ln wriling." He left no doubt,
however, that such an understanding had
been entered into wlth the North Viel-
namese.
The secretary is also reported to have
outlined just. bow, as he understands it,
the arrqement came into being.
VANCE, TOO -After Lai rd 's
testimony, and perhaps as a result of
hearing about the secretary's fiat and
positive statements about the previously
speculaUve understanding, members of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
began asking questions.
Finally, Chairman J. William Ful-
bright !}.Ark., <lllked the State Depart-
ment for information on the reported
undentlnding. Apparently the Nixon
State Department enlisted the help or
Johnson negotialor, Vance, to elaborate
on the touchy matter ..
In any event, Vance came to
Washington from his New York City
headquarters on f.1ay 15th. He discussed
the understanding, at some length, with
Fulbright and some of his colleagues in
Fulbright's private office.
The substance of the understanding, as
Vance then outlined it, was just as Laird
had described it : No DP.1Z attacks, no in·
discriminate shelling or Cities, and South
Vietnamese spokesmen would have a role
in substantive talks in Paris.
NO VERBAmt transcript was taken
of Vance's statements in Fulbright's of-
fice, though a memo was prepared later
from notes. Laird was testifying on .tbe
record, however, and a ' declassified
version or hi s remarks will presumably
be made publ ic in due course.
That may well produce some flap, bolh
here and in Paris.
After the bombing halt, or course, the
rocket attacks on South Vie tnam popula·
lion centers were resumed . There were,
according to U.S. commanders, repeated
violations of the demilitarized zone by lhe
North Vietnamese.
Therefore , Laird's forthright comments
will aln1ost certainly be challenged by the
Commw1ist side in Paris, and the t X·
istence of any understanding al au,
denied vehemen tly there.
RERE £N THE United Stales, publica·
Hon of La ird 's statements wHI lend itself
to a different sort of controversy. It may
well contribute lo the already mounting
criticism of President Nixon by the usual
anti-war critics and by others.
Vance 's former boss. Ambassador
Averell Harriman. has already joined in
that criticism. Others, especially the
Democri:tic "doves" in Congress are gel·
Ung ready to do so vigorously now that
President Nixon has called them the new
isolationists.
They will have a new and open avenue
r'or their complllints when it is officially
confinncd that there was. ln the dying
days of the Johnson Adn1inistralion, an
understanding with the Communist side
with regard to a certain de-escalation or
the fighting .
Critics will surely dismiss the Pentagon
claim. that the North Vietnamese retired
only to regroup for an attack again this
spring. They will be asking why Nixon,
like Johnson, has been unable to expand
and broaden the understanding reached
last fall,
Confused Concept of What Guilt Is
By GEORGE R. HOFF, P._D,
Much of our behavior is based upan a
confused concept of what gujlt is, and
what it means. We've learned to feel
guilty when we violate moral, ethical or
religious principles ; and we're moUvated
to do the right thing in order not to feel
guilt. When we do the right thing, we feel
guilt-free and this improve3 our sell·
esteem.
But being intelligent, we often use this
concept of guilt self-protecUvely, by mak·
ing it work for us and against others. We
turn it into a "s e c u r i t y shield"
\vhich protects us and helps make sense
out of our otherwise perplexing conduct.
WE SHIELD ourselves by dW!vowing
responsibility for our actions and, in.
stead, blame our conscience, superegu,
value sy1tem. sense of right and wrong,
etc. For example, to say "I won't cheat
on my spouse because l'll fee.I guilty
abou t doing it ." implies that it is our
guilt, rather than ounelves, which makes
lhe deci.slon to remain faithful.
Interestingly, institutions such as the
governmenl. church, and education heir
perpetuate the delusion that it is bad
behavior tha t is "·rong. not u.o;, \V1111.l
must be remembered is that institutions,
per se, are concerned with their prin·
cip\es more than with the people they
represent. \Vhen a church, for exampl~,
insists that its members act according lo
certain prescribed rules. it infers that the
person who is behaving is less important
lh an lhe behavior.
AND IT FOLLOWS lhal if a person
uses a church -or some other institution
-as the final authority which dispenses
truth for a price, he buys guilt in order to
a\·oid feeling it.
Real guilt is not based upon 'A'hot we
h11ve done wrong. Wrong action produces
Quotes
A1sem.blym1n Flo)'d Wakefield, llur1-
tlngtcm Part -''Those who sell
danearous drugs to a minor. or anyone
else. are In the eate1ory of one 'vho
would murder, and should be. made to
pay for their crime."
feelings o{ shame. Real guilt stems from
a feeling of not bavJng done enough; it
belongs to the unfulfilled wish, not the ac-
tion. However, contrar~· to what Jesus
said, we tend to place more value on ac-
tion than upon intention.
THE NEUROTIC uses guilt to evade
action. The psychologically healthy per-
&On reallies h.is guilt when he hasn 't acted
according to his true and total inrier at-
titudes and intenlions. The neurotic uses
irresponsibility as an excuse; the healthy
person is guilty ,.,,hen he is irresponsible.
It may be seen, therefore, that rea l
guilt is part of everyone 's character
structure : it canno t be avoided. \Ve are
all guilty because none of us has evl'i'
done enough in every situation ; we
haven't fulfilled our intentions or poten-
tial. Parenthelically, sh ame ls also an
element of our character makeup.
because everyone has done somethint
wrong according to our, or someone
else·s. standards.
ACCEPTING REAL guilt and shame
helps lo remind us of our humanness and
to live with our deficiencies. Nol ac-
cepting them may lead to U1e dcfensn·c
use of neurotic guilt to feed !he delusion
that acHons are more Important than in-
tentions. Real guilt is not a proble1n;
neurotic guilt is.
In fact, real guilt is beneficial because
it helps keep us honest with ourselves.
Neurotic guilt. on 1hc other hand, is sel!-
decei)tive and self-defeating, and detracts
us from knowing ourselves.
Each of us nlust distingui sh our rc~I
from our· neurotic feelings of guilt ,
Sometimes professional help is required
to untangle the web of feelings, but o['.1·n
a realization of differences between thetTI·
can help us li ve \\•ith oursc h es .norc
peacefully.
Live Longer: Take Afternoon Nap
Jumping to conclusions :
\Vhen the world is too much with you,
the best "'SY to get away from it all is to
take a nap. People who take a regular
afternoon nap worry less and live longer
than those who waste their energies
brooding over problems about whlch they
can do nothing.
Nothing is impossible to a man who can
e3t raw clams -and enjoy them.
There has been a lot of criticism la tely
of America's "industrial-military com·
plex." \\>'hat most of us want to kno,v,
however, is how "'e can become
members or it and get our fair share or
the profit& from defensive patriotism •
THE LONGER a novelist writes, the
lailer he usually is .He expects the
reader Lo weed the prose he should weed
htmself. 11 is far easier to write a bad
novel of 800 pages than a good one of 350
pages.
Apples now cost up lo 20 cents or moro
each In Manhattan supttmarkets. Ir thtlr
prices 10 much hl1her, it may become
chuper to see your doctor than lo eat an
apple a day to kttp him 1w1y.
Noture tries to hlde her miirlakes ; hair
the girls who wear mlnlsldrts frustrate
her by revealing them.
WE FRE'T ABOUT how we will ever be
able to arrord to end our chlldrto lo col-
' -. ., ,... _,,. .. -'\..
' . Hal Boyle ,
lege, but parenthood is a tough ordeal for
birds, too. Take a mother robin, for ex·
ample. She rnust provide each of her
clamorous brood of nestUngs with 14 feet
vf ,.,,orms every 24 hours. It is a wonder
thal the orange feathers on her breast
don 't turn gray.
About the only excrci<ie some people
get today is pointing the finger of scorn.
tr you want to invest your money M1fe-
ly, lend it to a m11n who stil l wears spats.
He is too old-fashioned to be dishonest.
A AtAN WITII a new set of false teeth
usually brags thnt he can eat anything.\
But if you lunch wllh him at i\ restaurant,
you will notice he order1 chicken a hit
king or corned beef hash more often than
he d .... steak.
It's a funny thing about the business
world -the harder U1e deti1ii0118 an H ·
ecutive has to moke, tile softer is tllc
cushion In his S~'ivel chair throne.
Jl is true tMl every dog has his day: It
ts alSQ true thal every day something
happens to the averait guy to make him 1
leel like a dog.
IN READING the ~lnnday morning
newspapers. isn't ii amazing to note over
a period of time how many Sunday
golfer£ arc struck by lightning -and
how few people are hit in church ?
If a fellow wears an ill-fitting sweater
that a girl knitted hin1 , his chances nr
escaping marrying her can be put con·
servatively at 100-to·I.
---WWW-
fiiday. June 27, 1969
Tile editorial page of the Daily
Pilot seeks to inform and stim-
ulate readtrs by presenting th i1
uew!papcr't opilliO'lll and com..
mentory on topic.s of i11terest
gnd significance, by providing 4
'orion f or the 4!'%prc.r.rion of our reader$' opittion.!, and by
prese1t!u1 g th<' rfiverse vie10-
potnts of in/orm.t:d vb.~ervtr$
crnd spoke smt:n on topics of tire
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
I. ..
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CHECKING
•UP•
How to Figure
Vocabulary Size
By L. M. BOYD
"PLEASE ADVISE your
Language man," writes a San
Franciscan, '"lhal a 'bulldozer'
l'iln be defined as a Rotarian
11 ho naps during lunch." •..
YOU'VE HE A R D that
··Laugh-In" line. "Heah come
d(' judge." A fellow named
Pign1eat Markham started
that. Jn his vaudeville act the
vear I was born . . .
~IARKETING MEN are still
trying to figure out why people
:;cem to prefer lo b uy
toothbrushes done up in green
packages.
\\'OR.DS -Do you know the
size of your vocabulary '? Few
rlo, few do. However, Wilson
Follet is credited with dream-
ing up a technique by which
you can find out. Go through a n unabridged dictionary'
inarking all familiar words
rha t start with "o," the n
1nultiply the tot.al by 43. That
~um, Mr. Follet ha s claimed,
1~·]1J be the size of your
\ oca bulary.
AT HAND IS a note from a
:'>'oung lady who sigru berseU
Freelove Martin. That is not
1he first time I've heard of a
i:irl so called. Freelove was
the given name or the wife of
~!ajor Thomas Jones, the
famous privateer. J on es
Beach. that wondrou s
waterfront in New York, was
named after him ••. WHO'S
LEFT among the big-time
film lovers of the 'thirties and
'forties? Cary Grant, I guess,
lhat's all. I mean now that
J{oberl Taylor is dead. Clark
Gable, Gary Cooper, Tyrone
Power, Humphrey Bogart,
Ronald Colman, Errol Flynn,
Spencer Tracy -all gone. All
right, keep movi ng. Don't look
back.
CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q. -
"What's your Love and \Var
1nan 's stand on sex education
in the schools?" A. He's op-
posed. Interesting sidenote.
Did you know psychiatrists
can't conduct suceessful group
therapy sessions on the mat·
ter? Right. Because it is the
one and only topic, they say,
upon wbich people will not
eventually level with one
another in open conversation.
Wby, l wouldn't know . Maybe
that's as it should be . But it 's
a fact. And our L. and W. man
is of the opinion, for that
reason, that sex education in
the schools could n e v e r
become anything more than a
lot of jargoney hogwash, of
which we are already in
receipt of sufficient supply.
AMONG NEW YORK CITY
taxi drivers, the poor tippers
are called "flapjacks" and the
ncrtippers are called "fish
balls." ..• IF MP.s. VIOLA
SCHMIOT of Merced, Calif.,
wasn't the youngest great
grandmother in the e<>untry at
age 46. then who was ? ...
NOTE IT STATED spaghetti
runs approximately 280 lineal
feet to the pound. Must file
that.
HAIRDO -Just about the
fastest-selling appliance on the
market today. I'm told , is that
electric boxful or heat-holding
curlers. Using same, a girl
can gussy up her hair in a
matter of minutes. She no
longer needs to sit under the
dryer for an hour o r'
thereabouts. This could be a
serious threat lo the pnr
fessional hairdressers. To the
wig-makers, too. Tbere just
isn't any excuse anymo re for
a girl to go around looking like
a forklul of busted guitar
strings. This commodity has
our Love and War man's
stamp of approv al.
Your questions and com·
me11ts are welcomed and
1oill be used wherever pas·
sible in "Checking Up."
Address mail to L. Al.
Boyd, in core of the DAILY
PILOT, Box 1875, Nttopart
Beoch, Calif ., 92663 .
Evans Crash Probe
E11ds; Report Begins
SUBlC BAY. Philippines
(UPI) -After three v.•eeks of
testimony from 78 witnesses, a
U.S.·Australaian Naval Board
of Inqui ry co1npleted its hear·
ings today into the collision of
the USS Fran k E. Evans and
tile Australian ca rrier
"1elbourne.
Rear Adm. Jerome A. King,
!'enior U.S. board member, an·
nounced the board would call
the ability of the man in
charge of the ship when it col·
lided.
Thal officer "'as LL lj.g.)
Ronald C. Ramsey, 24, of Long
Beach who declined to testify
because he said the board was
not prepared to grant him full
constitutional rights, such as
permission to cross-examlne
other witnesses.
Violence
Sweeps
. .
3 Cities
F'rldu, June 27, 1~6') DAILY 'ILOT 7
Final Apollo Test Begins
CAPE KENNEDY (U P)-spacecraft will orbit for a plaMlng long-duration space and S p ace Admlnlatl'ltlon
Technicians started a final month 2$3 miles above the venturt. (N ASA) announced at 1 pre-
'" ut11 .... ,,.. ,.._..._., practice OOuntdown today to earth to test the effects of P r o J e c t scientists spent 1 a u n c h news conftrence
State police were ordered in-Pf°'onged welghtles!MSs on much ot tod.ar comparing Th to Kokomo, Ind .• early today elear Apollo 11 for its manned I.he body system,, of the pri· qualifications o five pigtail ursday that although the
as five pollcemen were wound· mr randing mission while mate. 1 monkeys wh ich ha ve been in monkeys -hid names g}ve.o
cd by buckshot tn a Negro scientists picked -a monkey The flight will be the long-training for weeks for the them by their trainers dur-
nelgtiborhood. Omaha, Neb., for 30 days of spaceflight est ever attempted with a !Iv-fligh t. They planned to pick a lng weeks or teaching them
and CairO, UI., alsO had racial arou:-::! the earth. ini c,reatu~ an~ wlll he~ space flier and a backup late their space jobs, space aiencY
trouble. sc1endsts ._,,urrune what ou-in the day. policy was to identlfv lhe ·The 113-hour dreSll rehearsal ,, Nine persons were arrested stacles man mus t overcome in The National Aerona.utics space trave ler only by a num-
and 11 lnjUrtd In the third Joe Lou;'-'.!' countdown on the comblnation ber.
night or Uouble at Omaha, ~ of the Saturn S boo5ter rocket fl 1:f i:f 'f;:( '"tl '1:f "The whole thtory about
Thursday. That v i b I e n c e and the Apollo 11 command this as rar as NASA Is e<>n·
stemmed from the shooting C d • • and lunar landing spacecraft H ~.. h F • t cerned is that we don't want death of a 14-year~ld Negro On . £tWn. began one minute after mid· e e tr S to treat these laboratory anl-
girl by a policeman who is the night. maLs as anyth ing but Jabora·
so n of actress Hedy Lamarr. 'G d' If the test is complete<! ne xt tory animals. You're tran_s. In Cairo ba •••• r wh;t,, Said 00 wee• wm'"'' """''trouble. A rmstrong 'P;cks' H;mself 1.,,;,g laboratory proc<d"'" ' 111'~ da · .. ~ asLronauts Neil A. Armstrong, " " into space," said Donald Zyl-and Negroes urs Y nia,.t Michael Collins and Edwin E. stra. public affairs officer for
hurled rocks and bottles. at NEW YORK tUPI) -Long· Aldrin will have a go-ahead SPACE CENTER , Houston "regardless or personalities." NASA 's olfice of space 5dence each other from opposite. sides time heavyweight champion for their scheduled July 16 Asked if he 1 h 0 ugh t and applications.
of 8 busy highway in front of Joe Louis was reporttd in takeoff on an historic eight· (AP) -Nell A. Annstrong us· Armstrong pulled rank to He said his office had ''bales
the police station. The trouble good condition early today ln a day expedition. Armstrong and ed his '' c 0 mm a n de r 's become the first on the moon , of letters already stackJ::f up followed a march by 300 white hospital where he was U.ken Collins planned moon landing prerogative" to become the bou th· th. " • t 1 persons, 100 of whom refused first man on the moon, a Haney said: a t is ing irom an v v-
to disperse while Negroes wat-for trebeatment ~.r hw~atl wa,s is set for July~. fonner space a~en<y official "lt shouldn 't be that he pull-isectionists "and other people descri d as a P ysica co · Tue astronauts were brieled who protest" He said naming ched. lapse." in their spacecraft quarters says. But other o ficlats say na ed rank, but I think he was not the monkey ''would put us in
In Kokomo, coving bands of A police spokesman's report last night by fellow astronaul finn plan ever was made lll unaware of the importance of a poor posture if we have lo
Negro youths broke windows, that Louis had suffered a Harrison H. Schmitt 00 land-have anyone else make the the first man who ste pped on· answer these antivivisectlo'n-
looted and stoned cars on the hear~ attack was discoonted marks they can expect to see Hrst footprints on the moon. to the moon and looked at it ists."
near north side. Police who by associates of the 55-year· on the moon, and put in more Paul Haney, former public very carefully and decided He said that In the minds
moved into the area were old e:x<hamp. time today practicing in space-affairs officer at the Manned that perhaps it should be the of the public, names ror the
fired upon. Police Chief Ray-Louis was leaving a n craft simulators. Spacecraft Center, sai d Thurs. commander's prerogative. monkeys "would tend to make
mond Keller, a state police automobile T hu rs day In The .monkey launch aboard day that for almost t hr e e "Nell is a very competitive them ,pets, where the inte""
Ii e u ten' a nt and three downtown Manhaltan when he a twcrstage Delta rocket is years the lunar module pilot. type of fellow," Haney said. tion is not to have them be
patrolmen were s I i g ht I y complained or dizziness and scheduled for 8:10 p.m. POT not the commander, was sup· .. A lot of people don 't realize pets but primarily laboratory
wounded by shotgun pellels. told friends. ''I ache all over." Saturday. The specially built posed to be first on the moon. how competitive he is." specimens."
Indiana Troopers moved into ----------------''---''--'----'-----------------------'----------
the city to aid police.
Stopgap Bill
Funds to Be
Temporary?
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
government could collect, but
not necessarily keep, an e1tra
chunk of workers' paychecks
under the sw1ax bill up for
final congressional approval in
the House.
The stopgap bill ia designed
to simplify federal book·
keeping and individual tax fll·
ing next April without forcing
a showdown vote on extension
of the 10 percent surtax im·
posed last year.
The f e d e r a l govemmen l
y.·ould have to slop collecting
the surtax nest Tuesday
without House approval of and
President Nixon's aignalure on
the Senate-passed measure.
The bill authorizes the
government to cootinue coJ...
Jecting the tax: through July
31. The money would have lo
be refunded to taxpayers at
the end of the year i£ the tax
itself is not extended .
Later exteru1ion of the lax
without the withholding ex·
tension, on the o t h e r hand,
would forc e employers to
restart the co l le c t ion
machinery halted by the
surtax expiration.
And supporters of t h e
stopgap b i 11 say employers
c ou ld n't change lheir
withholding formulas in time,
anyway.
SERVICE
ON ANY
YOIM zuee TAt:IU 'M
W11L llllCOMlllTIOM YOUlll
z••co lfllh.fOA •2.• eKAlllCll "9CUIMI
..... •l"OOt. ., M.o.tr'
ZE~Cf 1-.~.:·,7:~
CLOSED-FACE
REEL 11amto7pm
Saturday
Jun• 28
Zebco for fine fishing tackle
no more witnesses and was I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
ready to begin writing its s e t e '
report on the facts of the No q 11D 1ng ::fi~~sthal killed 14 Amedcan I , •
A good catch is a
Zebco spin cast set
6.99 The final hearing elosed as •
lhc Melbourne. having un·
dergone three y.·ccks o {
repairs to its bow l n
:-iinga 1>0re, left lhat island for
Australia, v•hcre six months of
ll'Ork will be required to make
lie r. completely ope rational
nga1n.
A U.S. Navy officer in
1'har ge of planning an
c;:s timate a1 !his base said it
had been decided to junk the
aflerscction of the Evans,
,1·hose bow was sliced off in
the collision and sank.
Lt. Cmdr. John L. Ulrich of •• ,,. .,.
Asbury Park. N .. J. said it t FM/AM \1·ould cost about $20.7 million Sonv s '
to make the E\aOS a complete t7 ----
ship again -too much since a
hr~nd·new destroyer .c?uld be digi•:ta1 clock radio built for about $2.1 milhon.
The fina l witness before the .. _ , ,
six-man boa rd was the ex· Olily l&rge numerals that tell the time minute by minute.
t'cutive officer or second man You don't get an ordinary clock in Sony's Oigimatic FM/AM i~ com~and of the Eva!'-5, Lt. clock radio 8FC-69W. You get one that's pushbutton con·
l.:mdr. George. L. McMichael, trolled with lafie easy-to-read numerals, instead of a clock. 34~ of Fountain Valley, who (And easy to operate.) Which means: Once you set the time ~aid he had no qualms about you want and push the automatic button, it wa kes you up
the exact same time every morning,· automatically. With no
re-setting ever. Also Shuts itself off by itself after an hour
of play . And it can automatically adjust to a slightly higher
tone to wake you gently, if you doze off . And look, no hands!
Preiss manual button and radio becomes a regular table set.
Radio performance? Nothing bu t rich, big sound thanks to
Reds Down
U.S. Planes
TOKYO (UPI)-North Viel· special. Sony circuiti")'., 850 mw of power, and 1 full 3'h"
namese forces Thursday shot OynlmK: spe~~· An 1n a low, sleek, .compfci cabi net that
down t"·o u .s. unmanned takes up a m1 n1mum c* Speeft. Styled 1n white or pey. ~
reconnaissance planes that iD-plete with earphone. Come in, take one home, and pleaunt
lnided In North Vietnam. the dreams. BOn-
North Vietnamese News Agen· SINCE 19"47 ·
cy reported.
The first plane was downed
over Thanh Hoa province
below North Vletnam·a major
port ol Haiphong at noon and
the other in the afternoon over
Haiphong port, the ag~ncy
said.
These downlngs brought lhe
© QA VI 5 R R l~ \V N
411 E. 17th St.-· Costa Mesa
...
Another fine spin cast set from :Z.bcol
10.99
Zebco set include1 a Zebco #606 reel a nd matching 6 foot
fi be,olos 2 piece· rod. A handsome pair for a low price.
,-I' ' --~ <(~ ~-·!:!!" . .....,, -.. -
Zebco an o/orrosion .resist1nt reel
3.49
Our ;;202 '"' feotures a high Im pact pla1lic body. Com·
S.t includes, a Zebco #202 reel a nd match ing .5'3"
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Our Zebco #33 spin cast reel, great!
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Carro.ion r•si,tant reel with sta inless stMI front and bock
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Our great :Z.bco #606 spin cut reel
1.99
iotal number of U.S. pl3ne! !.--------------------------------------------::----::--::------, f~~.~~';;;):;,N~:'~,~·:t"!~1_D•a•ll•y•9-·.9,_Sot••'•'-· '-----'•4•6•·'.'.'.4
1 ____ .:..FU:..::LL::E::.R:..:.T.:O::.N.:_ _____ .:.H:..:.U:..:.N.:.T:..:.IN:..:.G.:...T_O_N_B_E_A_C_H _______ N_E_W_P_O_R_T_BE_A_C_H ___ _,
plete. wi th 75 yds. of 10 lb. lo1t Jina.
All corrosion re•istanl materials. Complett with 90 yds. of
I lb. test line. Rul Is of .strong 1 pc. aluminu m body.
ded. .•
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•
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Ziam
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th< J
Zetin;
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quell
lime ;:::
will I
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'
• -It OAll. V I'll.OT FridJ;, J.,. %7, 1969
Won't Budge on· WltJaJaoldlag ,,..,.__. ..
Ma.MUM Budget Compromise OK'd
Ii lj
H
-·
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Gov. Reagan -faced with a
legislaUve stalemate -moved
today lo make major changes
in his tax revision plan, .but
continued to reject. mandatory
withholding of state personal JnCome taxes.
Following long m t e t i n g s
with ~mbly Republican
leaders Thursday, tbe GOP
governor agreed to t h e
changes in hopes of coming up
with tas: revisions acx:eptable
to minority Democrats. They
hope to bring the new plan to
an Assembly vote in an ex-
traordinary session Saturdaf.
Good Samaritan
Neither the aitmlnistration
nor legislative leaders would
s.pell out details of the
amendments before they were
presented to a c los e d
Republ.lcan eau~us.
"The legislative leadership
has proposed amendments
lhey feel would be desirable
and asked the governOr to
agree to them," Edwin Meese
III. the govtmor's execu\it1e
secretary, said. Reagan went
along.
voluntary for everyone else.
lt was Relgan's· biggest bid
yet to break a fi..tcal dftdlock
caused by Aasem bly
Democratic refusal to back hia
16.19 bUJloo budget.
Democrats won't vote for it
until they have won two m•jor
concessions -a school aid bill
larger than Reagan now sup-
ports and a tax reform plan
acceptable to them.
Negro Saves Stranger
Meese said Reagan still bas
uot accepted the mandatory
plan of withholding of state in-
come taxes advocated by
Democr at s and some
Republicans. He favors an
allernative that fore es
withholding on Californians fil-
ing their first return, but "is
Their votes are oeeded for
the two-thirds majority re-
quired for budget passage in
the 80-sea( house, now 41-39
Republican.
And unless there's a budget
signed by Reagan in four days
-by midnight Monday, the
end of the fiscal year -state
officials will not be able to pay
bills in the coming fiscal year.
Berkeley People
Ready 'People's Pad'
BERKELEY (UPI) -Hlltl· World ·War JI buildings to a
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Milton
Gale saw a man lying on the
sidewalk. He quiclt1y knelt and
for 15 minutes breathed into
the unconscious man 's mouth,
reviving him.
Bonito C. Albano, 60, of San
Diego, a membe r of the
American Legion who col-
lapsed with an apparent heart
attack in leaving the state
convention Wednesday, was
listed in critical condition
Thursday.
Albano is white, Gale, 25, is
Negro.
As police arrived to take
Albano to University Hospital,•
Municipal Courl J u d g e
Malcolm M. Champlin of
Oakland pul his arm around
Gale.
''1 am proud of him," said
Champlin. ''I asked him it\;;;iiiO;;;;;;;;;;iiiO;;;;;iiiO;;;;;iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO;;;;;iiiO;;;;;;;;;;! there was anylhing I could do
for him and he looked at me
and said, 'Yes, sir, I think I
would like to join the Amer-
ican Legion.' "
Champlin, who also attended
the cont1ention, said he was
sending an application to Gale.
An anny veteran, Gale is
working at two part·lime jobs
\Vhile attending college.
Said Judge Champlin: "He's
lhe type of fine Americ:.n
most people never recognize."
I See by Today's
Want Ads
.....,;br;;j:,..-""=~ • For people who don't want
'
to throw rock.I, just flow.
crs, an BxlD glass house,
portable, you haul it.
~ ~ S~y's 7F-81 W is ~:o.
like a big fat FM/AM rad'IO that's ~-~ lost a lot of weight .•. without losi"8 its
power. Inside this slim beauty is the most advanced
"F ET'" circuitry-giving )'OU remarila~ sensitivity
and selectivity. And nea r hi fi sound with 900 milli·
watts of output power and a large 4 ~ speaker. Fea--
tures include an AFC swit ch to "lock in" FM
stations, tone control for musH: and speech, tt.min1 1
meter, and flftl -sc.ale slide rule dial fOI" more accu-J
rate h.Jning. Easy-grip handle. too. In stunning ebony 1 and silver, the 7F-81W comes complete with bat-1
teries, earphone arid an AC cord. Come in and try rt.~
SONY• dreds of University of
California students a n d
residents of hippie areas ad-
joining the campus opened a
nationwide "people's pad' '
program Thursday "Jif the
kids who are look!n/ to
Berkeley and who are coming
to Berkeley."
summer haven, w a s an-
nounced at a campus rally
which saw the return of Mario
Savio to a microphone in
Sproul Pltza.
lt was Savio, who now
sports a red beard to go wilh
his bushy locks. who led the
free speech movement jn 1964
-the foreruMer of student
revolt across the nation.
Long Beach State Dean
Quits; 'Battle Weary'
• Care to share? OCC Stu-
dent Jrom Pakistan is in-
terested in lit1ing with an
American Jamlly.
Sony F"NJ./AM Portable
'~-
~DAVIS -BROWN
. 411 E. 17th St.·· Costa Mesa They also made it clear that
recent setbacks have not dam·
pened their determination to
continue the batlle f o r
"people's park/' a plot of
university-owned land which
touched <lff bloody battles
between police and demonstra-
tors six weeks ago.
"We of I.he post-industrial
generation are natural Com-
munists," said the once fiery
ad-lib orator, who Thursday
read from a prepared text.
LONG BEACH (AP) -Dr. teaching after five years as
George Demos r e s i g n e d dean because he believes "it
• Beat the heal, thcrr's an
auto air conditioner otter-
ed for ;so. Thursday as dean ol students would be better lor the college Daily 9 • 9, Sat. 9 • 6 646°1684
at Long Beach State College iilo~h~a~veia~ne~w~d~e~an~ol~s~tu~d~en~tsJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~
"We believe properly is not
a thing to keep men apart and
at war but a thing to keep
men together," Savio said.
"We hope to live to see the
time when he can take up the
means of leisure without
preparing to battle police."
wilh a fresh perspective and because, he said. he is tired or less battle weariness."
''keeping the peace of the e-01·
The new pad program,
which involves the conversion
of a city block of unused
Crash Cause
Unanswered
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The
first federal salety board
hearing into the crash of a
priv ate plane ended Thursday
wilhou l clearly answering wtiy
a Cessna 310 smashed lnlo
Cucamonga Peak April 12,
killing five !>frsons.
Left hanging. said the board
spokesman, are these ques-
tions :
-Did air traffic controllers
give th e plane faulty course
direc tions. due lo overloaded
equipment?
-Was it pilot error:'
-Did the equipmen t aboard
the plane perform properly?
The eight two-story stucco
buildings on a site called Savio
Island are owned by the
Berkeley School D i s t r i c t
whose superintendent, D r ,
Richard Foster, confirmed ex-
ecution of a SI lease for three
months with the Telegraph
Avenue Concern committee.
Goldberg Asks
'Sa ve Sirhan'
NEW YORK (UPI)
F or m e r U.S. Ambassador
Arthur J. Goldber g asked
California Gov. Ron a Id
Reagan Thursday to commute
the death sentence imposed on
the death sentence imposed on
Sirhan B. Sirhan for the
murder of Sen. Robert F. Ken -
nedy.
Jegc rather than increasing the
potentials and capacities of in-
dividual students, which is the
real purpose of education."
Demos. 40, wrote Dr. Carl
\V, Mcintosh, college presi-
dent , that he plans to return lo
SF State Union
Ra ps llayakawa
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The teachers union al San
.rranclsco State College insists ' that acting President S. t.
Hayakawa resign. Hayakawa
says the union is vindictive
and determined "never to let
the campus be peaceful
again."
Local 1325 of the American
Federation of Teachers held a
news conference Thursday to
announce that if Hayakawa
doesn 't res ign by J uly 6, the
date of the next meeting of the
board of trustees, they wll l file
sui t to force him to resign.
GnDi llJIDing
19th ST. CAR WASH
628 W. 19th St. Costa Mesa
( l blacks West of Harbor Blvd. J
FR·EE CAR WASH
with any Gas Fill Up • , .
and Spray Wax Too!!
GAS WAR PRICES!
MOBIL GASOLINE
A COMPLETELY NEW CONCEPT!
The first of its kind in Oran~ County
We feature the fastest & finest car
wash .L---.,
COME & ENJOY THE RIDE THRU !
628 W. 19th St. Costtl Mesa
Most Credit C•rd1 Welcome --~
Get Pacified
at
Pacific's Savings Super Market
Offering:
1. 303 GROWTH FUND DEPOSITS
PACIFIC SAVINGS guarantees Interest for llve years compounded daily at SY•%
annually, which produces a capital growth of at least 30% if· interest la left on
deposit, or you may elect to have·your Interest paid quarterly. As to this account,
minimum Is $1 ,000.00 and principal may be withdrawn at any quarter without
loss of Interest if needed to prevent great hardship.
2. LIQUIDITY FUND DEPOSITS
Interest la paid an every dollar for every day ii la on deposit In these passbook
accounts, 10 you earn from date of deposit lo date of withdrawal -even for one
day. Current annual rate, 5%, compounded dally. Na minimum emount.
3. COMBINATION FUND DEPOSITS
These accounts permit capital growth aa lo deposlls remaining far three years,
plua withdrawal flexlbillly. They currently pay 5% per annum compounded dally
with an addlllonal bonus, currently 1loc % per annum, II left on deposit lhrae years
or more. $1 ,000.00 minimum.
FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX -for molnlllnlng lftlng1 accoantof~.OOormoro.
SIT DOWN SERVICE. No 111ndlng In Jong Nntt.
FREE NOTARY SERVICE.
ASK HOW YOU CAN.BUY (SERVICE CHARGE FR!E)
TICK!IS 10 the Forum, Docfgor 's11c11um or olhor
sporting 8lld -tor -through oomputerlnd
T.R.S. Tlckol ROMIYtllloftl S,.lln& NO OTHER SAY·
INQS ANO LOAN HAS IT.
AND MANY MORE FREE SERVICES
SOUTH COAST PLAZA •. 3333 BRISTOL STREET • COSTA MESA, CAUl'ORNIA
HOURS: 8:30 .A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. • SAT.: 10 A.II. TO 8 P.M. • PHONE 54M088
• • ·av1ngs acific
• • e • e e • • e e AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
MAIN OFFICE: 5401 WHITTIER BOULEVARD·. LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA
'
..
DAil V PILOT f
_.BART . Mans Baral Cllnle ..
Docto·r Earns Just $250 a Month
\ To Roll .
In 1971 WOODVILLE (UPI) pracUced. con&ervaUve. We are not something about ft. \
uwe art out here dolng whit
,
"' ~SAN FRANCISCO (Af.)
':-'l'1r# years · late beCa~e of
,.. '&uritdown delays, the Sl.3
billion San Francisco Bay
Area Rapid Transit District
(BART) now expects to have
its computeiiz.ed system, with
its space age rolling stock.t, in
action in 1911.
All subway and elevated
,automated trains and contryl
1'yslelllll are being bw\• hr
-e.erospace experts, newcomers lo rail traruip<rtation.
Five years ago Presiden
, Lyndon B. Johnson touched off a small dynamite charge in a 1
Concord. calir., onion field, of·
ficia1ly s:tartlng construction
of the 75-mile track.system.
NearJy 70 or the 75 miles of
basic construction now are
either completed or under con·
tract, says General Manager
B. R. Stokes.
Rohr Corp. was low bidder
at $59.1 million two weeks agp
for 250 of BART's 7 2 •
passenger cars.
Rohr says it plans to build
the air-condltioned aluminum
cars the same way it builds
jet lined passenger cabins.
The car contract came three
yea rs behind schedule jn
BART's plan to cut travel
time between downtown
Oakland an d downtown San
Francisco to nine minutes. It
oow takes 45 minutes by car
or bus.
Lawsqits and political hag·
gling w~re bla.'Iled for the
delay.
The car contract, for «-Runninn lfp Sail ample. was stalled until the ••u
state legisl&ture last Marett Crewmen on Japanese training bark Nippon Maru, currently tied up for week-authorized a one·half cent n ....... u d · .. ·-sales tar: in the district's three long visit at .c-v' uan , Ore. seawall show how a sailing vessel is run during sail-
..... counties t 0 produce $ 1 5 0 __ r_aJ_· s_in_,g_,_ce_r_emon __ ie_s_. _Th_e_
1
1
1
rouiirii·iimiiaiisiited;;;;;;ba;;;;;;r;;kiiiiisii3ii2ii0iifiieeiitiiliioiingii;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
~million in revenues.
Five years after Johnson ding to command signals from
touched off the blast. BART's the control center and wayside
iystem stands 52 percent com-computers at each station.
-pleted, said Stokes. Design The fare collection system
Work is 94 percent complete will be completely automated ~nd 89 percent of right of way and computerized.
has been acquired. Vending machines will pop
'*' The computer center that 1 -1· k rd ood f t.,ill automatically control all ou IC et ca s g or any -. amount of transportation up to
'!fainsLaiks nMearly'ttcom1p!~le ~t $20.
;Rle e em s a ... on in The rider will feed his card
•1'akland. into the station entrance gate
'.: At p e a k hours the center when be boards.
"Will control trains runni ng at At the exit gate be will in· Jo miles an hour top speed sert tbt: card into a machine
...,jth only 90 seconds between which will compute 'the fare
lrains. and subtract it from the·value
..-BART will have the capacity of the ticket.
JO move 30,000 s e a t e d -===========:II -passengers an hou r on each r-
.:p-ack -the equivalent of 20 to
J5 e1pressway lanes of motor
~alfic.
,. .. An attendant will ride in
.tach head-end car. He'll be
able to hit a button for an
j!mergency stop.
.., But a small computer in the
,sar will run the train, respon-
BOAT BUFFS
Alrnon loc••D•v i1 th• o011lr
full-time bo•ling editor working
on eny new1p•per iri Ore119•
Co1.1nfy, Hi1 eicc:lu1ive covere9e
of boefin9 •"d Y•<:htl119 n1tw1
it • d1tily f••tur• of the DAILY
PILOT.
Now A«opti19. AppAcatl-
for the Summ.!_I' S....
Comm""'l"'I July 9tlt, 196'
UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
An Affiliet• of Pepperdine College
A Sl•I• Ovt-t 111...,..lk IMl!hlk• ,...,.. ••• ~ IN ... c..w.. I e .. i:~ '!!-., ~ .,. ~ • ...._ p,...1.op1 ll•....._
-1:.,.1 .. i..t • 11...,itM "' .. c.ur...r. !1810 .... . .. ,_.y_,,_. ... ,...._
~ .. , ... ,, ... ..._,D.-
Clfl or Ylslt lflt "-"' (714) 531 .. 511
12345 WESTMINSTIR AVENUE, SANTA ANA
Salud is a Spanish word that
means health. For-IOlf18..2,200
rural farm familles in the San
Joaquin Valley's Tulare Coun.
ty the Salud Clinic mea ns
c ompetent, personalized
medical care at a price they
can afford.
Patients can obtain a series radicals reaarding the social
-of-ao--tests at Sllud-that life in -America.--We simply
normallx eo&t between J$O and don't think medical care in
$60 for fl. rural artaa Is what l\ should
"\re can offer the tesls for be, and M're trying to do
we-really enjoy doing-and-
we'rc having a lot of fun -
you've got to find your tbin1
and do it." · that because we send tol....:.c.....:c: __ ;_ __ :.....;~----------
Portland, Ore., to hive results
analyzed," Wendy Bro o ts
For Or. David Brooks, 31 .
h1s wile Wendy, 30, and their
son it means a total monthly
income of $2fi0, There are 16
fullUme emptoyes at lhe clinic
eou,ntlng the Brooks and Dr. Lee Mizrahi and his Wife -
they all eam $250 a month.
says. "They do lt by com· •
The Brooks and the Mizrahis
insist they are not wide.eyed
idealists out doing the good
work. They say, simply, Ulat
they are practicing medicine
as they believe it should be
puter. which la as eood if not
better than by lab techniclans,
and the cost is very low."
They are quick lo criticize
federal health p r o g r a m s
because, Mrs. Brooks says,
"Health care can't be depend·
ent on political change In
Washington.
"'Actually," she sass. "we
consider ourselves young pro-
fessional people in privale
enterprise. Really, we're quite
~eat) yourself r . . .
totSony/s
finelStereo
If you think of it as. ju$t a rtdio it's ridiculous. "It'~ ~n FM stereo{FM/AM Receiver with a built-in pre-
ampl1t1er, a 2erwatt music power amplifier plus a pair of
sealed 5· woofer and Z: tweeter speakers.
The 8FS·50W is a areet way to start a stereo system.
You can add a turntable or tape deck or both any time you
want to complete it But while you're makina: up Your mind
!or savina: up your money) you can be listenina:to beautiful
· stereo, ~mpli~l')~S of every brGadcaster in your area. ,
Sensrble stereo-another revolutionary idea from Sony.
SONY•
SINCE 1947
411 E. 17th St.--Costa Mesa 1
Daily 9.9, Sat. 9·6 646-1684 ~
~
-Next to you I like
Green Stripe best
USHER'S
GREEN
STRIPE '=---~ .. _.:...~··: .• =1_ •
Since 1853, the original -·-..
light Scotch
• • • " • • • •
Why pay $2800 for a so-called low--priced car?
..
• • • -
• • • .. • <
•
•
•
•
The Cuotom S io priced less than $2800.'
That means you can Wide· Track it for about the same kind
of money you'd pay for one of those ordinary ca rs .
Imagine that.
Then, if you aettle for le&s than a Pontiac, you don't have
much imagination .
Nobody give.a you more car for the money. Great, new,
overhead-cam engint. vinyl interior, pluah carpeting and-well,
Imagine the rid<. lmagint the performancc."lmagint the looks.· ---·
you get the idta.
Pontiac Cwtom Sis a lot of car. And right now your Pontiu]
dealer hu a grO:t teltction of 1tyles and coloa to choooe, from.
So, why pay·$2800·for a to-called,.low·prictd car, whert you!
can-Wide· Track it for lw than $2800?
I
•
-
DI
the I
that
Es
liam
"""' taia !
th< J
ktin.:
"W
""' . 1Wail
qlie!t
time
reall)
Ulem
Will I
by u.
lf we
t.actiC
~ bafl.
••t.J
....
[
• •
• a • ~
.,.. [)
r
• •·
'
,. DAILY P!l.OT
Quakes
On Moon?
4 'Gartlen Variety -GllAFml ...-
1~".;'
We'll See
HONOLU~U !UPI) -A
&eismograph which will be lefl
on the moon by the Apollo J l
1 astronauts may m e a s u r e
"moon quakes" and help
determine whether man can
someday colonize the moon.
Dr. George H. Sutton, one or
the principal designers of the
seismograph and a pro_fesso.r
of geophysics at the Un1vers1·
ty of Hawaii, said "seismic
vibrations from moonquakes
would en.able scientists to
determine the composition of
the moon."
SuttDn, who will leave for
the Houston space center after
the Apollo !I launch July 16 to
receive dala from I h e
seismograph. explained that
"moonquakes w o u I d be
equivalent of earthquakes but
happen on the moon."
SuUon was the principal in-
vestigator of NASA's ApollD 11
seismograph p r o j e c t at
Columbia University until 1966
when he came to the Universi·
ty of Hawaii. He is now one of
three ro-investigalors in the
project.
"Although there has been no
direct evidence of moon·
quakes," Sutton said , "there
has been evidence of tectonic
activity on the moon. the kind
of activity which produces
earthquakes on earth."
He cited "steep Jong cliffs
on the moon's surface and ...
NASA'S INSlGNIA FOR APOLLO 11 MISSION
whispy emanations of gas seen
through telescopes."
Sutton said the seismograph,
which will be operated by
solar batteries, will also pick
up the impact of meteorites.
"The seismic waves from
either the moonquakes or the
meteorites will help scientists
determine the interior of the
moon. the moon's history and
t em perature distributiOn, ''
Sutton said.
"I wouldn't be surprised if
there are moonquakes,'' Sut-
ton said, "but l would be
surprised if there wasn't some
seismic activity on the moon."
32 Honor t Students
CdM Graduates Listed
,
~-196" d ti 1 ( M8rlh• M111·14erbK/I. M1rk ltollm•nn, 01nltl S.l1ur. I I II\< ;i gf8 U8 ng C 3SS 0 Tl">Olnl$ Minor. G1rv March, PhlllD K1rtn S.mvel'°", Pa!rlClt Sand'lel. Corona del Mar High School M1rlooi. P"I M•rl<el. Chrl•tlne M1rnn, OoM• S1vnder1, N1ncv S<.hmldt, K.tren
b -h M•ll ~ Mil-Iv•"· MOllV Mt~!ed, Scl'lolltr, Sttven Schwer. Ito b 1 n was topped Y ol'-onOr JOhlr'lrll M1ver. Mlt.lltel Mtlo<, Ao«lerl ScMecl<. Jiii Scot!, Lol~ Selbst. Atll-t!lUden\S. McC1e111n, Tin• McComb. Ell.,.en dolDll Sl!!Ofl. Sloven 5 h 1 n1 I• 11,
McCormick, Ctrolvn Mc Cut Io ch Chrl1!ooher Shtlley, Wel'ldv SMll<>n, Deborah Bell , Vickie Black, P1mel1 McCuHouvh. N1ncv MtOon1kl, llod;tr Sith. P1ul1 s1i.111m1n. Anne
C Tttre McDowell, Timothy McGiii, Smith, 01nle! Smith, "'""" Smlll'I· Lynn Cardeiro, Becky arver. Pi1r1ce McG~l••· Scmtt Mclntlr., Scon Klelland, """ s .. vciot, P1u11 SPr19ue, Marianne Cox , Kenneth Ewell. Mctnlo$h, N•ncY McKen.... Cindi 11mor1w s11mbeuu11, 5htll• s11nton,
1'1aichele Fairbairn, I.aura ::~:,Id~·~. :'(~:;1 :;~,;1~1:~:. ~,=;:,_ s1ee•e. ar11n S•ern. J•me•
F Debo h , .. e\ds Ellefl Mldlatb. Jane M111tr, Mlnav .1.11111 Slomtl, JuMI 51_,, NIWIC"f erguson. ra "I " Mlller, A,ld'tard Ml1i.r. Slrtl!on. Sl\1r1nt Strelokv. S1'11nnon ('_.cne Fisher, Cy n I hi a ci.1,11111 Moctf. J1mn M~i.v, Sum""'· Otbor11! Swr!!. Ctr., Svmes,
Gadan·an. Robert Mos!tr Jr., Robe•• MO .. e. AM w11111m T1v1or, 1Ct111!et<1 Tt mole.
M•lker, 1Ca11>erlne Mvnroe. V!ctorlt 01vld Ter,..,.. 1C1tllv Thom11, Ann.I Also, Lorenc Braser, Larry N1y1or, Melll'ICI• Nltlr.um. Sc:ott O'Brien. TllCmoJGn. c11r!1tOPMr T 11 om P 1 on
Griswold, Karl Heller. Donna g~~ ~.~~":;• ~,"-rV:,:1,?'~•111':.; ~=-~ !~~;0 11'::'0"1(,~:"tie~,,!~7:"~ Holmes. Marcia Jackson. Nor-Kurt """· Lind• P11t1KN•, O..O•• y,.,,,. •• ,11. Jui1v Twlle9••· o..0or111 Pltl'lkh1rd. Otvld Pirkl, 1Ce111 Ptl• \11n NDV. Ron•kl Yt41GO. 01n1 Vll11, man Johnson. Steve .lump. •~. Tl>t!reu "-· CM•l-LoulMt s.,,.~ w"""'"'· Jelle"' Wilder. Wttldv Katherine Lynch , R j ch a rd P~ovic. Eric Ptters.o11, De1nN1 Wilker. wnnu .. w111. .1.11n Welsh. PIVIOI\. Wlllilm W1rd. Neisser. Gary Ne l 11 cs I 01.,. ... Plttf. lllom• l"llHt:r, ice... l(,1ru1 W1rnlck. 01vld w1rr1111, Mill.•
Dou I 0 netll Pierce, Clvilt!ne Pleren, Jlmts W111lll\I. Jolin WlllOl'I. lint W111M,
gas 110. · PlttDn, Jo Poole. Peter Pl'Oc:tor, K•r~ Jtrr., We1t11ertord, Susan W9bb, Fr111k Pattie Palmer. Pa u I a Pu11n..,.11. Rolll11 RtN. cr1i. R1u. W•H1, l"•rMI• Wtll1, r ..... W••""'· Ann t1rll1 lll1 ... ld, S.U11n Rllt'd. Mlcllllf.I Wh•ftoll• Htlf'M W'*ler, ICMM!ll Rabinowitz, Ellen R 0 SC , Ret-111. srevm R.tlr.:t•••t, R. 11 b • r I w111i., IClm W!lbrec/11, Rlcllt<d WlllOl'I.
Gillian Russell. Howard Scol-Rlcl1,.~ Jr.. J1n1ec, R. 1 n •,'" ,~,,~ •.•.-, •• '."· •• ~", "w"M••··", ..... 1c!! C1111sl1o<e R.ottln-an, John Roll n....,. " ~ ·-'" • , ford, Cynthia Speyers. Sharon Nlck RMln••· John RQv.,i. su11n wrlloll , 09bor•ll Wr••, Gr~., Yt<:k,
1bompson. Angela Tosli, Dea 1_c•~:c."c'c· c'c"c-:::..c'c"c'c· c'c~_"c'"c'-'c"c"-· -"°"'-c"-'-v_~_M_._,_..,_"_v_,_,._•. __ _
Wiese and Robert \\'illiams.
Others who graduated :
SU!lt Ablloll, Clifton .I.dim' II ,
J1..,.s .I.dims. Pttl Y .I.dims, Robfrl
..,d•ln1 Jr., krlslln Allloren, (/\tries
..,111r11111 111, Cll1rles "'lier\. J1.,1(e
Allrn, ktl/\r"Vn A~rlOn. 5 o' 1 n
Anda•"""· Rltllard "'""rew, ClleNI ... ,..,,.,.., H11tN And"w', CMnlt "''m'"-· 1111/\ryn Arnold, R.co.=r! Arnc>ld. J1mn .1.,11cr1fl. R.obrr1 Bobb!'.
St1v1 B-011111. (¥.,lllil B1lrd, Jol'm
ll1~er Jr.. OeMll ll1rlett, SU.i n
l'll•llf!wn, C1111trlne l1rrett, Chrls!ln.
B1rtolonr.
Cll!I.., t111nl'ler, c1111v Be1cll. Chris-
"' 8P.IVl"IVtrcl, Cll•blv BNllrtv.rd,
Wt""' lteltm. lellv lro11son. J1me1
·-· l1 .. roncr llt•V. Rlvmt. llP•I. Jol'tlt l••ver, Cll1rle1 llttrntl. Fr1nlr.
lll1nchlnl, Jo.n 111.,,.,.. J1""'1 llltck II.
klmberly l l1ckllur11, B r 1 d I 11 rd
lll•~~leY. 0111\e Bl1kentv, P1meln
fllt 1t ck. R!tflard ll91!um1n Jr., Frtnk
ll<lh~••rt<:t. H1r111 Bow1 Ill. J1me1
BrldOtun, J tM llrldtev. O.vld Brtdt.
Rob!!rl llre~r. Sltvrn II r I d 11 t
Ptl•i(ll lld si...,.
R.on11d llrock .. 1v, "'nnt llrotlltr!OI',
Brv~n arown, Dl~lt Brown. Donnt
llrow-n. Conni 8rv1n, "'''" llu!llnvloll. De! llul1uk, Ktthr!llt' e .... ,.,, S•ndrf\
ll11tle<. Btckv 8ul1"rrtPtere. Clltl"'ll
Camentll, D•nlrl (•r:M>n, Russell
C1r~n1"r , Dl•n• C•1t . -'obvn C1~v.
K11/\ryn Cl!tfJGn. C/\r"i•lv (h1mDleu•.
Jolt" Che!e,., Mlch1el C~rb1envn.
"'•nes Clftr•. Oebll••" Cletk, Ot11\st Cl•rk, Pa1ric11 Clork. WHiiom Cltrkr.
J1>11n cmr, c111rlt• Cottet . Otbrft Colemen, Gcorgt Connor, Bari»r•
Conroy, (~r!,tooller (ocper, Dovl"
(-Pr, Otbllfl/\ Coop•r, (•n<l•ct
Corne!, C1n<1ic• co...,I. Plllnlp cc.o,,
Cl~V Co11•·• Vlclorl1 Co>, Tllom15
Cr1J,, 511~ (rooll;t. Jom~ Culver, Kristine (uni!!. Htlla<:k 01vl•. C1rmtn
01v. Su1•n D11v", Su1annt OeFranco.
Ctl"'ll OrGunto. Su11nne O•MOfld, Oltnt OeMof!, J1cki1 Dt~u!ler. l rl1n
Oe!hltr
Don OltU.. M1rl!v" Ol1tM, JOlln
Oo<elz. "-vi:• Oor1m111. T.rr! Oouv11,. R.abed Outkwor!ll, Judllll Dunn, Lon· "' °""" 111, M••v ... er Dve, Lo•tn f"lldl"'ilfQn. c,.,11111 Eliftlld, IClmbo'rlv
Enlull, TtUY E111s, P11'kl1 En•ll•"·
J1r11d Eu1>1nl, Tl'lom•• E"""'· Mlcllltl tneu. P1ul F1tr. Ket-I Ftitr1boena.
Jev Flke1, Tonv Flnlev. ll1rl0ft Fl•htr,
P1trlek Fllllrrlv. P1l•lck Ftvnn.
Ci••Y F~rntv. Rltll1rd Fronct1. DftMY
l'•IO. 1C.1lllletft Frlll•ll, D l 1 n r
l''1tl!tll1, Ltwretoet G1rclntf, Na»<v
G1r1"111!, Cvnl!\11 G1rroulcl. IC ll!v
G1r1ka, Ke!h~n G1"11•1lcl, S.Uun Gem-mel, 111•11 Getty, Cvn11\l1 Ge.,tr. Lindi
Giii, Jilek Glrlml,.. Wll!llm Ciltn,,.,,,,
St llit Gordon, Cvn•"I• Gr1/\1m, GPO!·
'''' G••"'"'· J..01111 G•tnnum, Jellr1v G•1~. L~ll• Grtt<1,.1lo. 1Ct1ry
G•et•. Mlc.l\tllt Groom, 01nitl Gru,,..wftld,
G1rv Guenrller, Otlla•th G""'"''"'' Oebortll Ht•""· ••• .,,,., H•v•~nd.
Petric!• Hllli9tn. lo•I• H1nntk1M,
Lvnne H1n1011, Ktlhlttn H1rbl1on. J~n·
nll1r Htrrl•, SIH>lllin H1rt1ty, Ann•
H1uk, J1m111 H9v. Jftnlr H1vw .. rn,
Lvnn Htct0e11, Heal~., Helk••· ttrlen•
Httkkth. J1ntl HH!f.r. G•'90tV Ht1•·
1~11.. Tonf!1 Hewn1, le,ne Hln•~...cr,
P1mel1 Hln lns. Mory H-. SuunN"
Hot'°"'fY. L1ure1>t 1'1olm••· LIMt Hol~IOI', JoA,.., Hookrr. Oebr• HDOf. lllom••
111:trT1, (l'lrl1tl11<1 Hcuell, IC,rlt!lnt Houtll.
Nine"!' Hou1r, Jor>n HowtH. ltl(ll.ard
Hllbbf:ll, R.l(NlrO Huber. (llrlt HUC:ll.I•
bl<, Rlcl\frd HulSIOft. IClrk Hul•lrom.
Glell Hummel. Gell Hvmtoh•tv&. w-..
Hu,.!, ,,.,.,.,ret Hulclll'", P1trlc11. lrwln, 0-ln J1mu JR .• Scutt Jin.
ltld'llrd Jenstf\o Heo1rv J"""'°", ll1,,.
"'" JClttntoll. Sir.Or• JcllwnOn, oetiorlh .JOM1, Oell«•ll Jef'dln. Jtrntt J..,..les, ~la k11e. JofWI Ktll,.;P!, ,,.,.,..,. K•-•• n...a111, Kellt•, Ctroetvn ic:-. 11:1r.., k..,I, ICtvln l(fi(t.
Rldltrd IC1flll, Clrol ltlml>IU, .klllll
IClnltll, Oon!11 Kllller, K1•en 11:1 .. 1.
Arthl.lr l(lfflllll-, J-' tU11t-lcL
Ct1I• ic:n.11.. Jttlrtv l(odl, llll<l'll•G K_,,., Ktlflervn Kr._,, •'"'""I' KrlUI. Ctrv Kr-. Anlt. k'111k, Jtt-ff"lf K,_,t1 llloblrl l(,uell11. ll:ollr!rl lKY, l"ITrklt l,..tH.-. .._ U1'1<111111· °""" ltnilJI ..... Gl9rMftllt lAnM• L"l'M LaW'oell, Mk:l'lltl L... l"rtrocltt l 'c t 1 r c •
Klfhtltfl LH, SI"""" lffd'I, OOnn1
LAWlf,, $Illy t.twl1. )tt'lllilfr Ll1',
Uur• l!nfff!btft. Jo l inker. Ltncll llttlt'foM, ltl(ll1rd LIYonl. LU(ll\dl .J L81111, 5.,1v11 U.Ultll. E 11.n l owt.
'l'l'tllrrlll 1.-ltl, Wllt11m lllbltll ti,
OorllfW MKMHll11, 1W111 ~•'-''• Oowl•• ,Mtl\oll, ltetlltrll Mfltfle,
NO
OM.IGA.T10N! ._ __ .... __ -·----·--.,,-............ .. _ ... _.,_~ .. -... --.
HllFS HOW TOU CAN WIN ONl Ol MOIE OF lflll
PllZU YA.LUID AT Sit.Oii iN THI 19'1 OUNGI CO.
HOW Ii DICOUTOlS SHOW -n.J1I GfYUWA.Y"'
___ .... _ .. _____ .. _. -·------4 .. ____ _ ... ________ ._ .... -.... -
... ........ --.. , ... -. ... -.... ---.... ---·--·--·''"' . ...... ________ ......... _ .... _ .. __ _ ----..... _
North Little Rock :.
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cotor on select l\1rdwood .olldl and
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grained Wllr>ut color on Hlect hardwood 1ol+dt
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conven!1nl vlewlnQ ll'!Qlt. Sl'fl1rtly 1tyled o~erh1ng!11g top. AdYll'ICild 2enllh Super Gold
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CENTER
STORE HOURS:
Weekdays 9 am to 9 pm
Saturdays 9 am to 6 pm
HARBOR
CENTER
2300 HARBOR BLVD •
COSTA MESA
PHONE 540-7131
I
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'~61)', June 27, 1969 ' DAllY PllDT JJ
· U,unty Approves
" Four Con racts
Co••ferenee S~t Si1¢ur,u11
; ' ' '
Planners Eying Space Age
S.\_NTA ANA-Cons ct!on contracts-~four profects
totaling more than •1ss,ooo
have been approved tiy county
supervisors, who also have en·
dorsed an englneerillg con-
tract for a $200,000 airport
project and rejected the one
bid on a sixth job.
Contracts approved include :
-Engineering services for
the north light plane tie-down
area at Orange C o u n t y
Airport, $9,800 to Hall and
Foreman of Santa Ana. (The
tot.al job, including seal coat lo
su pport weight of 12,S0 O
pounds, tie-down gear, rest
rooms, fencing and an area
for car paking' is estimated to
cost $200.000 ).
-O'Neill Park water mains
and pressure reducing sta·
ttons, $57,2211 to McKeand
~1echanical Co. of Buena
Park.
-P o w e r distribution in·
lltallalion ior UC! tttedical
College facilities at t b e
111e County Medical
C er, $33,9001 to Allen Elec-
tric Co .. Santa Ana.
-North Orange C o u n t y
Regional Civic Ce n t i r
landscaping, S S 7 , l 0 3 to
Johnson's Landscape:, 2 3 2 0
Newport Blvd., Cosla Mesa.
-Replacement of lrvlne
Park sewer lines washed out
in the winter's storms, $7 ,36&
to R & R Pipeline Co., Santa
Ana.
-Joplin Boys' Ranch im·
provements .including a 7,380-
square foot school building
and a 5,610.square foot com-
bined kitchen, dining room,
and adrninistratlon building.
No cost figure as lhe work is
to be done by the boys
themselves under supervision
of the ranch superintendent.
Rejected was lhe .single bid
of $18,762 for air condiUoning
of the county's Data Services
computer room. 'The bid was
87 percent higher than the
e::;tilnated cost of the job.
IRVlNE -An all-dll)' con-II""" even U>ouP County prepared by ThomJ>IOO'Ram... "'!'he ultimate 119b!tlDO Is the
ference Saturday al TTC Irvine AdmlnlatraUve Officer Robert Woolridge of Rt®odo Beach. courlty, clttea, ~ n l e r e st e d
Or Co t • "n--E. Thomas has -mm··•ed · ti Jib ... pla · cJtlzen groups, educational !n-on ange Wl y s ..... am .... ~~ m coopera "' w ~ n· stttutions and the' public get· -~· blhQ
Design Project" to ens~ iqelusion or $187.iOOO In the nlng staff, and· city manaaers 1{ng 'toce..lh~r' 'nd ·,working Jc " -
"space aie IUJdellnes" for 191f.70 county budget to In· have been uked to prepare toe:etheri" the plarmliig direc-\.U'I I
future development wlll be co-iUate lhe project. repot"ts for their city councils tor noted. "The county has no
sponsored by the county Board Supervisors indicated that before the July 24 deadline/' . power over land use in the W•tcllff Pl••• St•r• Only
of Superviaors. wanted to study costs further Dickason reported. ciUes so their coopetation is a 6 4 2 • 2 4 4 4
The conference, sponsored belon giving flnal approval in Norman Rall\ls, cbairmtn off1 ;;~pa~r~amOIO!t==~•:eq~u~~:i~te~.'~' ..,..,.,:ii~~~~~~~~~~ br "Project ZI ," Is designed to upcoming budget hearings. the Tustin PWmlng Com·l1 aid in formaUon of an ln anawer to questions, mission and a member of the
Jntergovernmental Po 1 icy , Dickason said ''no great staff Project 21 study team, said all
Planning Commbsion 'and a increase is e.1pect.ed to im· lnterealed oreanizaUons 1n lhe
Citizens Direction Fi n d i n g plement the project. We will county have been invtted to
CommJtttt-lntegral parts of keep hiring at a mlnimum and Conference. He asked and got
I.he overall program. supplement staff work from the s u p e r v i so r s • co-
Planning Director Forest the oulllde wbtn necessary." sponsorabip.
Dickason, principal promoter He promiied that coats Dickason will address 8 city
of the study proje-:1., told weuld diminish in succeed ing managers al'd administrators
SANTA ANA _ county supervisors this week that the years of the five-year plan meeting July 3 and also has
th county: Planning Commission program. been invited to speak before
County OKs
Rezone for
Irvine T1·act
supervisors have set e slage b d ed lb t "a ti ate Su-rvisors are al.so waiUng the Oranoe CUy Council July 8 for a 1,000-acre planned com-1 urg em 0 c v ,... ..... Un CJ C ciJ munity west of Culver Avenue the program immediately and for endorsement of the Orange and the Tus ty oun
lb S ta Ana to glve continuing cost sup-County Lel.gue of Clues. The July 9. and soulh of e an port." legue members will meet July He said 0 clly officials rtac-
iT'S A FACT!
If you spent 30 seconds looking ot
each of our shag samples, it would
toke you over 9 hours lo see them oll-
so come early ond bring your luneli.
DON'S ·c1ARPET SHOP
' 426 SO. MAIN (2 Blks. No. of Bullock's) ORANGE Freeway, by approving a ped th -·• t' h •-·-ood Th rezone on the first 303-acres The board members stop 24 to act on e protN.;>cUs. ion a1 v=i• very g . ey
I b short ot fqll' approval ap-"Each of the 25 clt.ies has realize the need and want to HOURS: '·S:JO DAILY CLOSID SUNDAY
planned for deve opment Y 1 _!'."~'!'"~U!ly~w::!al~U~n!__!f~or~fu!!11!..,<:cos~t_Jre<:~e~lv~ed~_!!lb~e_Jp~J~an~_!;boo~u:!,:,_~coo~pe~r~a!!t•~··:• _____ _. .. ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,9 ..,..,..,..,..,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,!!0! the Irvine Company.
Cypress Water Issue
Before Cou1ity Board
The Irvine Company plans
lo de velop the initial st.age
with 5,000-squarHoot lots for
a community of 5,108 people in
J,400 homes. Planned is th~
use of %67 acres for homes, 20
acres for two elementary
schools, eight acres for local
parks, and eight ams of com·
mercial . properly .at CUiver
and the ,freeway.
•' CYPRESS -Final approval
:, or the dissoluUon of · ttie
:~ Cypress County Water District
to elimihate double taxation on
:: property owners in Cypress
·:
,: -DEATll 'NOTICES " •, -----------'• , OSPITAL ,• ',* PK.I ~!111. 11~1 11.o••n~. Hunlln!I'· 1Grl lltadl. O.~ ~ 0.1111. June 1S.
,• Survived by l>u11Mnd. John; IOI\, Jt•nt ~ !i•lrr, Con1~ek> 111~!~1 1nd 11• ar1noi. ·~ cn1111~. Se•vltes wilt b<' l\tt<I '" !ll•elY, rd~l>O. Lo.ul 1rr1n<>enunls bY
•" DildtY Bf'Clttt•I Hunllntl0.1 V1llev MD"
,. ru1ry, 1-12-n11.
" HURD • '• c."''"' H. Hurd. Alie 17, ol »I s. 11 ... v ·~ FrDnl, B11boe fsl1nd. 0•1e of dnll>,
•• Jur.e 1S. P11I koulm..tl~,, Soutl>SI•~
• Boy Scou" ol Arnerlt1; Pllll lirtsld•mt .: cf Hvntlnttool P1rir Union $Ch<lol OT1-
1r1et; 11111 mtlll!r CJI' G~•rdltn M11anlc
'• Lid!* 1Jt6. survlw.:I bv w!lt. MIVd L. '.o Hurd1 two ICW\1, Frtnlo;lln 0 , •nd H1tr'1'
·' H. Hurd, both el L"" .-,rlfflt.: 11~
I" onint tlll!d""' 1nd 11>rtt 9re1t.gr1"'1-~ t~ikl'11n. !oerv'Kei, ~l\lrd•V· J PM, \,; P1c!l!c Vll'w Chtl>ltl. Dlreclo!d by 81lll
•. Melrtwrv, l5XI E. Co.ti Hl"9\llf1Y, Ci> .,;· rone dill Mir.
HUGHES
Oov!d H. Mu!llln. 1~1 S1bn1 t1r.e.
'•' !-1un!lntll:w> BNt h. SurvlV'td l7v lwo
... • bortl!er1. S1m~I 1nd Loul1 ttunl>t.:
"-two nlKe•, ll.111!1 He nel! 1r>d Lutllle
L~-. krvlc1~. S1tur<1.ov, 10:)0 AM.
.... Petit Ftmlty FU"'!••' 1-1"Vllt. WRIGHT • ·' Ne!Hf; M. Wrl~h!. A11t ea. ol S~'" •;, C..,tef' $1,, COSlt Mt55. Dale of dt•!h,
'.I J\lll!t 14. So.Jrvlv•d bv two "'n•. Htr•
.... old w. Sr. '"" Wlll••d N. WrloM, ~ botl't cl Coslt ~''' Oauol>ter. 8tth· <I Gr-. k1Ma1: dauu1>tor Jn ltw. ··Mfl.
<W Ptl~'I' Miller, ~nit J..1111 ~""" er1nd· .•, clllldr.t01; 72 •~ll·l•IFICICl'ltldrll 1..t
~ two 9re1!-9rut.,r1Mctlllll,•t'f1. S1rvk11,
• !>1!\lftlay, 11 AM. lftll l!ln>tdWl'I
"'· C1>1..el, wfTll Rtv. Charin Kru1e ol!I-"' cl1!lr>0. En!...,bme<ll, Mtlr<IM! AbMv.
, • Di.-tcled l7v Btll llroeo'W•~ Morl\llry,
lo 110 Bn:iat1w1y, Cost• Me11.
~ CLARK
' _, Rlc"ard Wll1!1m ci.rk. AM 6~ of
~ 1GU1 8f'OO!l1>11nt, Hu11tl1111IOI' 8«<;11. t Strvites 11t!OlllCoMSClt"3 Melrt111r1.
•: ..
•,
s1dlf. A,. Minni•. Ae~ eo. ot 111 '1~ .,• coin, Hu"llngton Bt1c1>. Dehl! ttl dNlfl,
•"• JJXW! 16. So.Jrvlwd by hulblnd, Wal!tr S. Minnis. Mrs, Minn!• w11 1 m..mber • ~ cf I~ Finl Unlltd Mettiodl1t Cllurch,
>' H11n!l119!on Bta<:ll. ServltH , Monoay. ~. 11 A,M. Sml!~I Cl>1MI, In~'"'"'''
• • Good SMCll>llrd tffn'l!ltry. Smllh1 Mor·
,• lu1ry, OirKlcr1.
~ CAVE
•• Reece s. c1~e. XII E. Ed9e-lt1.,
,• NtwJIOrl S.1c~. l.Wmber of Ntwport
'• Mtrt>or Exthll'l!lt Club, 1"<1 MtYI, ~. Kin•••· F & A M Lodge 119$. D<1hl! rA d'~lh, Jur.e 25. Survived l7v wile,
l!lt tlrlte a. C<1vt; two tons. Rtt« $. Jr., S1cr1meM01 Ind WJlll,im C1vt1,
" of Heme!: three 1!1t1rs, Mrs. Lo R<!t
;o Kewg~. Wltf\111, kenses; Jtt~ C1ve.
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••
,•
•
,.
G~leY Colot-6<:1, tnd Mn. Ml•llll'el
Miiie. tieWOOft, NllW tt1mP'hlrt. !>Irv·
ic,J, Tu"Clly, 1 PM, Btl!Z Cht~!, 35'11
E. '°''' Hlghw1v, Corona dtl Mar, wlth Or. W. H. D. H1tntd1v, cf !tit
F11vnder5 Ch11•th of Rell9l11ui Scltf!C'I,
Los At111ele•. olficl1llt111. Dll"«ted bV
Bt l!l Mortuary.
ARBUCKLE & WELSH
\Ves tcliff Mortuary
427 E. 17th St., Costa l\fesa
61Ml88
BALT'l MORTUARIES
CQrona del Mar OR ""9
Costa l\le1a Ml f-!424
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadwar, Cotta Mesa
LI H4l3
DILDAY BROTBEllS
HunHagioa VaUty
Mortuary
179ll Beaeb Blvd.
Hundngton Beatb
IC.'1771
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARlt
~metery e Afortuar1
Cbp<I
3500 PaclDc View Drlve
Newport Beacll, Calllonla
Ht-1711
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FIJNERAL
ROME
7111 9olA Ave.
\Vestmlnter m im
SHEFFER MORTUARY
Laguna Beach Ctf.1535
San Clemente 41UlOI
SM1'111'S MOR'MJARY
m Alain St.
Dnntlnetott 8eact.
LE Milt
I
will be before the Local Agen-
cy Fonnation 'Commission·
J uly 9.
the LAFC voted Unanimous-
ly WednesJay to approve the
dissolution "as to form '' but
final approval awaits legal
papers being prepared by tbe
County Counsel's office.
The acreage is east of the
Marine Corps Air Facility
(Lighter-Than-Air Base) and
the full 1,000-acre project will
be developed ,~·hen lhc facility
is no longr.r in military use,
company spokesmen said.
Elimination of the district is
sought by the city of Cypress
on the contenlion that 64 Jl(ir·
cent of the city's 25,000
residents have been sub}ecteAI
lo double taxation for sewer
Laguna Man
Gets Post
services. ORANGE -Tom Frigone,
Darrell Essex, Cypress city 38-year-old Laguna N i g u e I
manager, told the LAFC that resident, has been elected
the city could supply sewer president of the Orange Coun-service.s to all residents of the . district "at Jess than half U1e ty School Employes Assoeta·
existing cost." lion !Qr next school year·
The district was formed in Friione teaches history and
195.1 v.•hen the area was large.. government at M c M i 11 an
Iy unincorporated to se rve a Scb<iol for delinquent children
5,000..acre area in north\vest who are wards of county
Orange County. juvenile court. County School Employes Since that date cities have Association r e p r e 5 e n t s
been incorporated in the area employes of special county
<1r have annexed portions of Sch b the district's lands and it has schools and County 00
been cut in half. ll still in-1_0:::1:::fl::ce~em:;::p_Io.:.ye_s_.,.. __ _
eludes portions of the cities of YOU. KNOW La Palma, Buena P a r k ,
Anaheim and unincorporaled ·
areas in Los Angeles County. YOUR CHILD
Cypress got LAFC approval
lor lbe dissolution by pro-WILL LEARN mising to take over operation
of the water district's entiN!
sewer system throug~ a joint TO SWIM AT powers agreement with other
affected agencies. Bu OJ
After final LAFC approval BLUE
the dissolution faces two more
st~ps-approval by U)e Board Qi s. win Yo•
of Supervisors and a vote of ~·· S.lboo hl••lll. tb'e peopJe in ~ distric~~ · kiiitti AH, Timt•
An estlmated annual s_avlng 546 1800 of $100,000 to taxpa,yers !s ex-•
peeled lo carry the elect1on .
~' liahl enouati ... onl)' a'bit ~r 9 lbs. '.(tt ih dla~I ~icture
is ·a el'IOl.ICtt kw the entlN family ••. upstairs, downstairs, k1tcll~,
ti or den. The set WOfb on~. ol 12V ~uto/boat battery ("'Ith
IO!'lll acc.ssorin.) Cocnt ;,,~l'ld !.ff this popc.1larl~ Pfited porta-
ble, The lV·710U Is ttle perfect set f0t private viewln1. lb: ld-
vanc:td a11·SOlid-stflte clrcuilfY ind f'ront mounted speaker deltvers
a clean, cliilr sound All controls ire conven~tlj pouped tor
e1sy oper1lion. CoinP'ete with •rphone for prMlte llstenins. It's
belutiful In chltCOll or lilht py. IOft•
~.
Ju1t $99.9S
'
@DAVIS RRCl\\/N
411 E. 17th St .• : Costa ·Mesa I
Dally 9 • 9, Sc!t. 9 • 6 646·1 684
I
•
,
,•
UCB
nasaplan
that giaarantees
you'll save
~--------------------------, I I
I
I I I
I I •I
I ;
I
Dllt Unftfd CllifornZ. B1nt:
Tflank• for ahowlng me how I can 1t1rt uvtng.
Pli•a• 11nd m• 111v/11g1 account 1ppflc1tion. rp ,at 1
good tta&On to 1av11 and I w/11. No llf, 1rtd1ar bllf•I
~·1 1 ·~"
l. tr , ""'
' I m"'°'--~-----------~ I : ,,: ;. I .·~~ .. ~ .. ~,-----.... ----2,m1~":--~,_
~------------------~-----~-~ • o 1 I j ' j '
' I '.
'
For all your good Intentions, you can't seem to
save a nickel to save your soul. Paychecks come.
Paychecks go. And still there's little or no money in ·
the bank for savings.
United California Bank-knows how hard it ls 1 to save. That's why we· have a plan that guarantees ·
you'll save $10.-$20.-$30. a month or more, and
hardly miss it. It's UCB's Automatic Savings Plan.
Just dec ide how much you want to save eac h month.
UCB deducts that amount from your UCB checking
account and adds it io your savings.
Moat savers tell us, it's virtually painless. And at
UCB, your savings always earn the highest bank
Interest rate permissible by law.
Isn't there Something you've wanted to save
for anyway? Like Europe. It's as easy as saving just
$2.00 a•day for one year at UCB! Whatever your
goal, sign this coupon and send It along today.
You can save. You wflf save. ,
We guarantee It.
r.il : CALIFORNIA' ffi[3UNITED
~ BANK ··-······ The bankers who do 1 llrtlt more for yov
,
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liam ,,,. ..
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th<.
le tin.
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our o
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''JI
JI DAllY l'llOT F"rldq, June ?.7, 1%9 .
For ·the Trumans Celebrate 50th-· Wedding Annive~sary
. . •
Record
JUNE II l OllGE-&llEUHINGEll, Lnler L , 7t,
of 111 33rd 51., AP!. A, HtWPltrt
f111dl •nd p.,...,,1.. 25. of "°' To«a11, F-.11111 Vtl'-Y. ICl OETlEll-HOOGES. E~rd IC~ U. of 6111 Fer11le1f, C01111"o& tffl Mar
1nd \lldarll L .. 71, ol ll hloc.on W1,,
NtwPOrt ee1c~.
SCHULER-HALI., DOnlld II.., n. ol Kiil
FlilMIOtf", Hlllllll!flon Be.ad! Ind
Deborah l(a;,, 1 .. d JOGI Cl,Nftberlaftd
0..IWI, (.Wirest.
CAHAVEt.l.0-STEYEWS, Jl!fftw G .. If, of l lff Foothill Dr!''• Hunth11loll
8eKfl llfllll J•111... ,,._ 11, Clll .ios
Jnmlne Drive, 8re1.
(;AllCEAU-11.AYflURN, ROHi" L., JI).
Ind N1ntl' C., lJ, bolt\ of H it • Hltlolldt 0.-lvf, N11rttlft9IO!i, ~ '~-flAllOWELL-OOOSON: llJ'ftll'" C., 1), ''9'r
d 16311 S. Otd\& ... , c;.~ tlld SW • e .. 21, e1 40llJJ-.-.c.d1, eor-oe1 .... . ZACH ... RY-RICMAllOS. l 1wrenct W ..
11, of 1:)111 FrlftJM!d 0..1\'e, H"""
11.,.IOll 9-d'I ind G....itol'f'n N .. 11, •
of 1'4511 llOM Cln;lt, Wetl'"lnster.
RIGALl-LYLES.-P1ul D., 21, of l :W? •
Dat;1n.o Drl.,e, W"11?1!n1m 1nd
6•rbll•• C., lf, of lf2' W, SIDDI' Aw., •
Al>lhel'"· BILLINGSLEY--l'!AAS, _,.,.,,. M .• l t, of • !OJI W, Cook, Aol. C, ~!1 M1ri.
•'"' C1rol A., lt , ol 6ll2 T!li.rnook. • W1Jl'"ln1I~•.
SIMPSON-CAR LSON. Antl'lonv V., ,1, •
of 4141 N. Otllo, YorlM Lindi 1nd
C1rolyn A.. :n, of »• E. atlbo&
61Yd .• "''· "· 6'1bcNi. • Glt.t.GG-STONE, Oo119l1• W., ''· uf 1110 N. Pl.t<:tnll1. Fullerton •lld •
ci.e,..,1 c .• ''· ot :n&St Newlllld. Apt,
173, Hunt111111on 6tKll. • GRAY-AAG.1.N, J1rriet l ., •S, d 11Q7
Anllt u• WIY, N'""'°"' 8eKI> Ind • Anne Marie, '2J, ot 10d ltl1, Corane
~IMM, • ICIDOEA--OTSUICA. Ak hlrd A .. :n, of
121 °"I 51 .• 6tll:w '1111"" Ind Arlel
J .. :n. of tels V1<1no Piece, lrYlnt. • COFFEY-llULICLEY, G1,.., L., 25, of
'1911 McHt1911 St., l -8"dl 1rlCI • CMNI L , 211, of 3U51 Cimino El •
Molltlll. CM>11tr1tw1 lleldo. • < STAOUP-WOISSON, P1>U1i. It., 71 , of '
1om w1mut erlCI r .,r1 L .. 11. of m1 • Ctltllne, both of LOI Alt ,..itvs.
SCHWAll-ALEXANDEll. A1vmond G.. • 1D. ol 1ll01 P1k'n St .. F'ountll'I Vl llPv
11'111 01..,., c .. n, o1 vn Fr1t-sl1flf:I,
Hu11llt19IO!I 6"th. • Ml'IOllE-TERRY, G~ary W .. 11. al
1157 TerrY Ind lllll I(., 70. ol 16olt1 •
L..,,.,.., Lint. bo1" of Hun!IJ'llllOl'I
l!.t1dl. • McCARTHV-SCio!ALL w1m1,., J., "·
of 11•8 Surfllclo Aw ., Surt11de Ind • J"'"""' E~ :H. ~I 1t175 N. p_,,
llillM!tRI. • t.1GHTNEll.-4>E.t.TH, Dontld C .• 3', o1
1000 E. Ore ... 81-rd. 1rlCI Ailttrl L, 31, • of 1000 e. Oc:Pn 8lvil., boltl .,,
81!bol. KING-41U88All:O, Robert E., 0 , ol •
1'111 5¥11~ illllf, T1rt.1n1 Ind
E111'1YnM, :ii, of "'1 ~II, Hllft-•
ll"'llo'I llfll<".
Sll VEY-PA!NTEll. l cvd N .. 10. ct •
""' 'A' s r .. Hunl!ncih>/I lltacl> 11nd F~f M , 11. ol 1JJ1 W, l'ol'a.;rnl •
W11Y, ~11 An11 8AVIER-OLIVA~ES. Roberl F., 11. ti! •
7a:Jf! C•llt! LOC!IN IM Nc•m1 L .. 11,
ol 31'11 L"" Rios $1 .. both cl s.n
Juln C11lll•l!IO. •
l lr.HTHOLOEl'f-STAHNIC E. ~I I( ..
,,, o1 1 ... 1 Carrt'OI' Lint, '""""11no~ •
Btl<h a'ld Cl;tlldll A., 11, ol 3116
E"'ll' St., S1n Pt-dfll. •
.. lLIN-JONES, Tnoml• 0 ,, 37, ol 463
Ser.1. Ccr1>t11 001 M•• 1"'11 "''"' L.. • n. al '9111 011t.at1. G1rdfn GnNP.
WILLI A!.111-lllStfOP. Hen,.., J ' "· or ROll!fl. lki• 151. Yl'tl;~ll, WllJI\,, Miii •
P11m•l11 J ,. ?I, of U1•1 G1r>11" Lint.
Hun1ln11lon BPJH:I>. • kOFFM .. N-HESS. RDMrl C .• 11, el
1m1 Swfnw•• (a<jrl, D11n11 Point 1'111 •
J lldilh A,. 11. ol 60I C•ll• 81envenld0,
Sift C~M!e. • l YON-NOHR, llt11<e H., '1. ol 8' lln-
dl l~lt!-. N~ Btldl 11'111 ttrh li.... •
M., ?L of '17 V1lk• Vip-, F~l'"1on
8YEltS-TUCICElt, Jltll"H E . 11, or
1°"'7 ICeldl P.~. Ind O~bore~ IC • 11, •
of 1SIO! Lit Florn, boll\ of
Wn t ... lnt i.r •
SHOTWELL-OSTEEN, 1111\(1 IC , ?l. o1
'921 Slnll Mot\iu LIM, Oell1•, Te.. • ~l Ind Lindi J , 13. ol ,.2(1 81•vltw
Ort.... Cor°"" del Mtr • llREWER-GIERICE, JMn P , ?O, l'ld
Nina' L .. lt, boll! ol UI" Jedc3'111, • .o..l. A,, MlclWll' Cll'\I, I EA-FLETCHEll, J11me1 H , ,,, tit •
t116 T-Cl•ck, Fc.,,,t11n V1llfo\o "'I
Mid Kar ... It,, 11, ol )"1 E. LVnW<>Od
A~~Or-. ,MEV~S-IROWN, M~I J . ,l , or
14H'I DIYll, W"""irt&~ 1NI Dfo1M111 E~ It, llf S11f W. Mti SI , Senti An~
WIGHT-McCOY, Howl n:I A .. Jl. 11n(I
LI""• L .. It, both of inn Qvttn,
LIM, A.DI. J, Hurifl"'tol\ llfftll
WIHGMAllT--MILL(lt, ICl!Ml'ltl J . 7'
flf SDf Dc:url '""'" Lllftf 8Ncl'I .,,., P1trld1 W., t1. (II 16M1 lolHt l -.
M11t1l!11tlott lead!. (TCHIJON-FOSTEA. Olirtlel J~ 211. ot 'HU A.llf'Ol'I , .o..l, ,, Sllftll AM ll'WI
1(-L., lt, llf fl'OI P,..._ Plt<t,
AIA. HC, Cell• ""-· MAYo-HALL&.TT, MlcJ'>.NI J.,. ,s, et
,., 'Tlrltlft "'". c.i. Mn• lflCI """' c .. n. (II 1'* s.. C.rteli.. ....
~1""61.
presents ...
-
Gas Of Electric.
.Xycle Dryerwfth
cookJown care lor _,,,.,..,
Whirlpool
ECONOMY WASHER with lflllll"Mld
Permanent Press Csrel 3 cycles, 5 WaslHinse
water temperature selections, 2~"""'
water selector and Magjo-Mix filter. Buy now and save.
•••
Gasor,electrio
Cttstom Drying wr1h
Tumbffl PrttStt. Permanent
Press Dryfngf
DELUXE WASHER with special wrinkl,..lree care
for Permanent Press! Features 4 automatic cycles,
SuPer Surgilator Agitator, 3..fevel water selector, .'
Bleach dispenser. Bettefi·tl'lan-ever washing-
lower-than-ever price!
MOIWU'At700
BIG SAVINGS
Limited quantity. ..
Colors available
---··
Gas orelec1ric,
Automatic
Permanent Press Cycle,
Aulomaric Dry ays/am!
Model Ll'.l 7IOO
Whirlpool
SUPREME AUTOMATIC WASHER
with no-iron care for Permanent Press!
Deep water rinse and 8 power spray rinses, bleach
dispenser, fabric softener dispenser, Magic Clean
self cleaning lint filter. Save on the best!
irlpool
~e all the new 1970 laundry line
NOW ON DISPLAY AT
• ••
' -.
DIRECT FACTORY DEALER
401 MAIN, DOWNTOWN HUNTINGTON BEAOI 536-7561 e BllOOKHURST & WARNER, FOUNTAIN VAUEY -962-2456
IPAltlt......WHllCD. ll-C., ~ d ~·~"'~·= ·.::= ~· t.=1 _______ v_1s_1T_T_H_E_O_RA_N_G_E_c_o_u_NTY __ H_O_M_E_S_H_o_w __ N_o_w_T_H_R_U_J_U_N_E_2_9th __ A_T_A_N_A_H_E_IM_c_o_N_V_E_N_T_IO_N_C_E:.:N_TE:..:..:.R _____ _
I
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.
The Sear ch Is on for Alumn i
Calling all 1959 graduates of Huntington Beach High School are (left to right)
Mrs. Charles Manley, Mrs. Gary Sutton and Mrs. Ivan Umphenour, members
of the committee planning a 10.year class reunion which will take place begin-
ning at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 23, in the Newporter Inn. Former graduates
are invited to contact Mrs. Rona1d (Rosemary Ferguson) Miller, 545-0878;
Mrs. Sutton (the fonner Nancy Dodson ), 842-1979, or Mrs. Max (Judy Rath·
burn) Bowman, 962-3003, for additional information.
Party
~
JOO&Nol HAtllNliS, 642-4321 ~~·~-..... 11
Enjoying a "Breath of Spring" tonight in The Barn will be members of the
Assistance League of Huntington Beach and their husbands, who are taking
over the playhouse fur the evening. In the mood fur spring are Oeft to right)
Mrs. Thomas Broderick, Mrs. Richard Crouch and Mrs. Gilbert Turnbull. Mrs.
Crouch and Mrs. Broderick are in charge of the event which will benefit many
of the league's projects in the community. FoUowing the performance, theater-
goers will enjoy refreshments in the pla..Yhouse.
• + ••
'P.l !'I' MONEY D6NATE O-Members of the bowling league
of Golden Key, Huntington Beach, raised a total of $348 for
the Child Guidance Center of Orange County during their
ncenUy completed seri03. Receiving trophies during a
league luncheon were (left to right) Mrs. Bob Goodson,
series winner, and M~. Jack Greeley and Mrs. Gene
West~rfeld, ~ho, wi1h· Mrs. Jeri Peterson, tied for high
game,
Achieveme rfs Applauded
' ' . Dual awards as Woman-of·the--year were
presented during the installation lunclieon
which. C'Ol:icluded the season for meinbers of
Gold..,Key,UunlinJlloo llellcb suJUllU1,g!))llp ,
for tlie ·Chff > aance • Center Of Or8i!ge .
County.
Mrs. Raym<>nd Morehouse and Mrs. Wil·
'li8ln Hanna were jli<lged so equal in their
contribution to the many philanthropic proj-
ect. of the group that the committee declared
a_.tie .
. Mrs. Morehouse has served as decora-
tions chairman for the fashion show, chair-man of the toy and doll booth for the annual
holiday bazaar, assistant chairman for the
benefit luncheon and a member of the bowl-
, ing league.
Mrs. Hanna has beeri thrift shop chair-
man, reservations chairman for th~ fashion
show, on both the bylaws and nominating
committees and a member of the bowling
league. She also will serve as fi_i;st vice presi·
dent during the 1969-70 club year.
Both women ·have assisted With a major-
ity of group's activities and many times
stepped in during · emergencies to assume
unexpected responsibilities.
Also recognized during a luncheon were
winners in the group's·bowling league whose
efforts added $348 to the funds donated lo
the clinic.
Mrs. Chickering Nelson, chainnan, an~
nounced the wiMers who included the Mmes.
Bob Goodson, high series; Jack Greeley,
Gene Westerfeld and Jeri Peterson, who tied
for. high single .game; John Wyatt, Vi Reed
and Nelson, winning team, and Westerfeld,
Georgia Schaeffer and Peterson, second.
Good sports award went to the team com· ·
prised of the Mmes. Al Krukeitberg, Robert
Huffman and Evelyn Pierson. Mrs. Kruken-
berg will serve as bvwling ·chalnnan during
the coming year.
Mrs. John Rau, of the guidance center
board, presented the Woman-of~tbe--year
awards and in return was pr.esented with a
check for $1,050 which the group raised
through its thrift shop, general funding events
and the bowling league.
.ALL ·Tl EO UP -So equal were ih~'r ~p\rlbutioni to Golden Key,
H!iniirigton Beach support group for Uie.'-Cbild Gwaance . Center ot
Orange .County, both Mrs. Rayi:nond · 14oreljouse (lefi) iind -Mrs. Wil·
liam Hanna were presented ,awafds as·.the' group's Worhan-bf.the-year •.
' .
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~· ..
No Smoke or Fire Needed toGet Grape Vine T.angled Up
DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband·
and l have been married 21 years. We
have a wide circle of friends and have
done a good job of ra~ing three splendid
<'hildren. I would say our m.an1age is bet· .
ter than most
About four mon°" ago 1 received three
telephone calla from rtiends wl)o wanted
me to know they were so sorry to hear
that Fred and I are getting a divorce.
Fred received two such calls at hi.! place
of business. Neither of us can figure out
who started lhe story.
Yesterday 1 received another such call.
Apparently the rumor has slarted again.
ls lhett All.Y way we can trace these
completely false stories? Why start
!hem! Why! -WONDERMENT
ANN LANDERS ril •
DE,lll 11'0N• Dol't wut< yoar tlme
and ~ trying te ,track dowa rumon.
IV• tlllle, arennttq, 1r.11r111q u4 ...... _
.... -..... , It coald lit njbod)'. Wby! E1"1 probably.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: We adm our
four grandchildren. My husband is-com·
ple1el7 cle'(oled to !hem, apeclally the
two llllle boys. G<aJl!lpa hu been Ute a
father to them. 'Ibelr mother conslBen H:
1 blesslof aince their own father was
never very attenUve to his young family.
Now that tho c!>lldren m getung more
articulate it ii appartnt that they love
Orandpa: very much. nietr ·own f1lther
bu dedded thla love lt "unhealthy"
litcauoe Grandpa Is getU111 old CM'• 80)
and be may dJe Ollt ,ol llleM dayL Al>
co rding to their father, the children will for Gramps. RoW unrortunate that he year two ol my girllriends b8do lbortJons
suffer severe emoUonal trauma unless views Grampt ti cttmpetltioa lD11teH of In ,Europe and one nearly died beclUle
they dlminlJh cailtact ' wllh the old ·an added 'dtmeUloa la Ille Uvet <ol 11111 ·ohe tried to •abort herself. They ·were all
pnUeman. ~e wants to "spare them" by youagst.en. . · • ~ Jtillld from »called·"better families."
llintting Grandpa's visits to once every i • • • -D. TROJT
ten dsy1S. DEAR ANN: '"1ose paren(a; who 1allow· DEAR TROt.r: i i dN1& Med le tell
Is oor aon-ln-1aw rllbt? If you say so ed their J5-year~ld ,son to entettain ht8 '"8· .Yot did. Bit pod. 'Ill.ab.
we will accept this decision. -SAD gir!Crlend In his bedroom far three. hoUrt
DEAR SAD: Y • • ma1t tc-ctpC their berore dinner ("1th the door closed) and
deellttl M mauer wU& J ..,-. The then allowed them to return to Ul8
Wlahet ef the parenu m11t prevall, '°' bedroom after dinner must be nuts.
-ol Ille snadpona11 or of Au Don't partnt.1 realize ·111at tAldi!< a 14-
lAncJen. year.old kld.know11 more about se.1 than
II 11•1 my oplaioa 100 want, here tt Iii: his parents knew at 20? When my brother
Tlte ~ cbtldml get kom 1 Gnadpa 11 was 16 he e.1plairied' to Mqni and Dad
• speelal kind ol love. 'l'll<lr Lt~ tlloold what homosexua~ Well! and how they got
lit gratelal lor It. I ~ yoor ooo-11. lhat way, They were SHOCKED. ·
law .-11 tlle lllecllGo Ida -led Tell par<nta to 1et wllh 14 Ano. La.It
Do )'OU loel m at .... ' ' ' out .ol lt! la
everybody having 1 ,good -bot 1"01 Write· ror Ann Landen' beM!et ..,,,.
Key To POplllarlty," encloltng wtih your
rtquest ss t'tl!ll In coin and • lbeg, .. 1r. acliliessed, stamped envetobe. · ·
AM Land•rs will lit glaa to titlp 1W
, wllh your problema. Send tlitm to her In
care or the DAll.Y Pll.OT, ·•!oolnl a
stamped. aell..dd....,... ~ . • '
IN
the I
that
E:
liam
"''"" nia: l
the.
Jeth1
"W
our o
wajl
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~
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them
will 1
by th
lf \l.'t
lactic I aspec
Is a[f
~ • I
• •
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I
'
' . J4 DAJl.Y PtLOT Frld1y, June 27, 1%9
Candlelight Ceremony
Marriage Vows Taken
•
•
Before an altar banked with
a fan shaped arrangement ot
gladioll and whlte c b i n a
chrysanlhemums and flanked
by double tiered candelabra,
Karen Lynn Kraft exchanged
wedding vows with John
Qlples Washlngton ,JT.
'1'be Rev. Richard Busch of·
ficiated during the double ring
ceremony ln St. Paul's Eplsc·
opal Church, Tustin !or the
daughter of the Loui.!I E .
Krafts of Santa Ana and the
son of the John C.
Washingtons of New po r L
Beach.
Flower girl Tracy Hartung,
the bridegroom's niece, seal·
tered Clower petals in the
bride's path as she was
escorted to the altar by her
father.
Candlelight satin and chan-
tilly lace fashioned her bridal
gcwn, with the lace bodice
feall1rlng long sleeves and
pleated trim. Tiny satin cover-
ed butlons matched the full
satin skirt, which swept into a
chapel train, A Juliet cap of
chantilly lace held her three
tiered elbow length veil of silk
Illusion, and she carried a col-
onial bouquet of white roses
and lilies of the valley.
Matron of honor h-i r s .
Charles A. White and maid of
honor Miss Frances Jones
were gowned in posy pink taf-
feta belted at the waist, wilh
ruffled trim at the neckline
and full length de.eves. A pink
bow headpiece caught their
short pink illusion veils and
1 they carried three long stem·
J::>ll;j-'----·~ --' -' med red roses.
...... ,..., "'" Dressed in similar outfits
MRS. JOHN CHARLES WASHINGTON JR. and carrying one long stem-Monte~ Peninsula Honeymoon m ' d r o s e w e r e t b e bridesmaids, Mrs. Lawrence
..
• '
, ..
Bomar, Miss Gail Hudgins and
Miss Julie Groncmeyer.
Gregory T. Thornton was
best man. Christopher R. I Kraft, the bride's mother,
headed the ushers who in·
eluded Kurt Dykema, Har·
rison D. Breyer. James
Munselle and Geoff Thompson,
Approximately :mo guests
attended a reception i n
Orange, where P.1rs. J ames
Klug was in charge of gifts
and ti.trs. Ronald P a y n e
circulated the guest book . Also
assisting were the bride's
cousin from San Diego, titiss
Victoria Beehler, the
bridegroom's cousin from Fort
Lauderdale Miss Gretchen
Wegener and Miss Pat Harvey
of Santa Ana.
Special guests included Mr.
and Mrs. Jo seph
M.Washington, th e
bridegroom's grandparents
from Orange, Mrs, Russell
Watchter, his grandmother
frpm Tustin and Mr, and Mrs.
Robert. Lewis of Las Vegas.
.. ···--
•
During Traclitional Month
Names :.Linked at Altar
• '
"~ . •';/ff ~~r.;. \
' ' "
I
LT. AND MRS. DANIEL R. CLARK
A honeymooo trip t o
E.-.da followed the wed-1
ding of , Suun Hallett and
Mlebael Moya, wbo m:hanpl
YOWi and rill&I during an
.. • afternoon ceremony ln St.
Joachim's Catholic Church,
Cost.a Mesa.
The bridal coople, daughter
an<l/IOO of Mr. and Mrs.
'.f Eugene . R. Hallett Jr. of La
Mirada and Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Mayo of Costa. Meu
repeated their VOWS after the
J\ev. Thomas Nevln.
A 1ac'f gown with a full skirt
aod train that fell from the
sboulden WU selected by the
bride. Her short veil was
call(ht to a crown of white
rOleS, and she complemented
her ensemble wijh a bouquet
of white roses centered with
pink rosebud1.
Formerly Barbara Smith
Mn:. David Hayes attended
the bride as matron of honor
and bridesmaids were Mrs.
Sqe stollberg. Mrs. Andrew
MaYo Il and Miss Jodie
Mllhoust. They were Iden~
tically gowned in soft pink em-
pire sheath dresses desianed
with short sleeves, and· long Barb.ara
In South
Smith Weds
Dakota Rites
Exchanging their wedding
vows in the Emmanuf!I
Episcopal Church, Rapid City,
S. D., were Barbara Smith of
Honolulu and Air Force Lt.
Daniel R. Clark,
The bride, daughter ol Mr.
and Mrs. Woodrow W. Smith
of Huntington Beach, was
given in marriage by her
father, and conducting the
ceremony was the Rev. Han-
ford L. King assisted by the
Rev. Herbert W. Clark, father
of the bridegroom.
attired in a pastel blue gown
and carried a large white
chrysanthemum.
Serving as best man was Air
Force Lt. Earl R. Wonning,
and ushers were Lts. Donald
Beeks and Robert .Carnes.
Following the ceremony the
newlyweds greeted friends
during a dinner reception in
the Officers' Club, Ellsworth
AF Base, where a special
guest was Mrs. C. H. Walker
of Norfolk, Nf!b., grandmother .
of the bride.
stf!mmed pi.n.k roses we.re ,
their floral accents.
Mayo, brother of th 'e
bridegroom, served as best
man and ushe.ra were Frank
Frand, Bob Oberhardt and
Eugene R. Hallett III, brother
of the bride.
Following the ceremony, the
newlyweds r e c e i v e d their
guests in the Monticello
Clubhouse, Costa Mesa, where
P.fiss Maggie Evenson and
Miss Anne Hart assisted.
The new Mrs. Mayo receiv-
ed her bachelors degree in
history and drama ant: her life
teaching credential from the
University of Calllornia, Santa
Barbara.
Her husband received his
~ :· ·N, ...
MRS. MICHAEL MAYO
Ens.enada Honeymoon
bachelors degree In industrial
arlS from Fresno St ate
College and his leaching
credential from the University
of Southern California, where
he will receive his masters
degree in August.
Los Angele s will be home
for the newlyweds when they
return from their honeymoon.
For her wedding the bride
selected a floor length white
silk linen dress. The simple,
princess lines were accented
with touches of embroidered
lace at the neckline and wri sts
of the long sleeves, and her
shoulde r length veil was
gathered to a circlet of
matching lace. She carried a
white prayer book and a
cascade of white stephanotis.
The new Mrs. Clarke is a
graduate of Whittier College
and completed a year of
graduate study at t b e
University of Hawaii. She has
taught school at M a i 11
Elementary School, Hawaii. Hadassah Installs New Fabric s
Con sidered
P.frs. Harry D. Alfrey of
Newton, J(an., was her sister's
matron of honor, and she was
The bridegroom, son of lhe
Rev. and Mrs. Clark of
Pueblo, Colo., is a graduate of
South Colorado State College
and now is servtng in the
Minute Man System.
The couple will make their
home in Rapid City.
Servicemen's Wives
Saluted Through Song
Pianist Jacqueline Fa In
Nims will present he.r piano
fantasy titled Fantasia in Red,
While and Blue for the Tues·
day, July 1, meeting of
Newport Beach Christian
Women's Club.
The Newporter Inn will be
the setting for the noon event
which also will f e a t u r e
Children's Americana Fashion
Show presenting children's
wear from Sears.
New office rs for the Harbor
Chapter of 11adassah were in·
stalled in a luncheon meeting'
which took place in the home
of P.ks. Marvin Slipson.
Special installaUon officer
\\•as Mrs. Sam Horfman,
leadership training chairn1an
of the Southern Pacific C.oast
Region of Hadassah, the
Womea's Zionist Organization
jn Am'erica.
Incoming president for the
group is ri,trs. Leonard Rubin.
To serve with her are the
Mmes. Allen Shafran, fund·
raising vice president ; Marvin
Slipson, education vice presi·
dent ; ~1artin Nemeth,
membership vice president;
Howard Geller, program vice
president; Barry Michaelson ,
treasurer; Stan Gott 1 i e b,
recording secretary; Allen
F r a n kl e y • corresponding
secretary, and Gary Resnick,
financial secretary.
A Penn State University ex·
tension home furnishings
specialist suggests t h a t
0homeowners consider \\•here
and how a new upholstery
fabric will be used before it is
bought.
Fabric that is suitable in
color, design and texture, and
is colorfast, soil·resistant and
flame-resistant is a good
choice.
3333 Bristol at San Diego Fwy.
Lower Mall Nnr May Co.
The bride was graduated
from Foothill H.igh School in-
Santa Ana and attended
CaHfornia Slate College at
Fullerton. Her new husband
also is a Foothill High
graduate and attended Arizona
State University. He i s
presently studying at Orange
Coast College where he is af·
filiated with Zeta Beta Tau.
The couple plan lo make ~
thei r home in Santa Ana upon
their return from a wedding
trip to Monterey and Carmel. • .
P.1rs. Nims. wife of Jerry
Curtis Nims, was graduated
from Florida State University
t with a BA degree in muslc and
was named to the dean's list
and homecoming court of the
university.
MRS. STEVEN LOUIS PARLATO
St. Andrew's Nuptial1
Victoria Griffith Now
Mrs. Steven L. Parlato
An e v e n i n g candlelight
«rernony united in marriage
the former Victoria Lynn Grif-
fith, daughter of lhe John D.
Griffiths of Newport Beach,
and Steven Louis Parlato, son
of the Louil Parlatos of
Massapequa, N.Y.
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church was the wedding set-
ting and the Rev. Dr. Charles
H. Dierenfield was the of·
ficiant.
Following the double ring
nuptials the newlyweds were
hooored during a reception in
the Irvine Coast Country Club.
Susan Dahlberg, cousin of the
bride from Huntington Beach,
circulated the guest book
among 100 friend! and
relatives.
The bride selected a while
organZa empire style gown
with a walteau cathedral
length .train beginning at the
shoulder. A short full vtU was
caqht to a wide jewrJed
headband and she carried a
CAIC8dinl bouquet of lilies of
the v1Uty, stephanoUs, pink
roses and fem.
Mn. Ka""1 Griffith Frank,
llJtcr of the bride from Costa
NB Auxili.ary
Newport Buch Polk:e Aux-
iliary 11thm thilul Tue.day
of the month It 7:'° p.m. ,I,oc.
atlon ts 1v1Uab1e with Mn.
Rob<rl Wbefler, 17$-lllf.
Mesa, was matron of honor
and M. Elizabeth O'NeiU of
Vancouver was maid of honor.
Bridesmaids were C a r o I
PaJ"S(lns of Santa Fe and Nan-cy Parlato, the bridegroom's
sister. They doMed floor
length A-line gowns of faille in
pastel shades of g r e e n ,
lavender, blue and yellow.
Lace trimmed their Edwar-
dian sleeves and small flowers
made up the headpieces.
Multicolored roses, b a b y ' s
breath and fem were selected
for their bouquets.
The benedlct asked Joseph
Zwl Zwaigenbcrg from Tel
Aviv to stand as best man.
Ushering were Dwight John
Griffith , the brlde'!t· brother,
Lorne Mallin of Vancouver
and Lynn Phillip s of
Pasadena. Blaine W i 11 i a m
f'rand. nephew of the bride,
was ring bearer.
Among special guests was
Barbara Flagg of Riverside.
The new Mrs. Parlato at-
tended Springfield C.ollege,
Massachusetts, and t b e
UnivetsitJ of Ca Ii 1 orn ia,
Riverside as a philosophy ma·
jor.
Htr husband was a student
at Springfield College, Bard
College l n Annaodale-on-
Hudson. N.Y. and Unlvenlty
of !.funlch.
Following a wedding trip to
San Francisco lhe couple will
make their ho1ne near Bard
COUese y,·here the brid groom
is taming his BA In llteratW'e.
Bellflower
Graduates
Recruited
Tuesday, July 1, will be the
deadline to purchase ti ckets
for the reunion or 1959
graduates of BellfloYter High
School.
Planning the buffet dinner
which will begin at 7 p.m.
Saturday, July 19, are P.trs.
Albert (Janice Meech an )
Ramirez, 866-2057, and P.1rs.
Jeff ( Robert a Annstrong)
P.1inklt r. 842-2497, who may be
contacted for reservations Qr
additional information.
Country Club
Dance Draws
Lone Parents
Taking to the dance floor Al
Costa P.1esa Gui! and Country
Club tomorrow eve.nine will be
members and guests o f
Parents \Vllhout Partners,
Crange Coast Chapter.
The dance will be preceded
b:v a cocktail hour at & p.m.
Co-chairmen for the t\ e1Jt a~
Mrs. Mary Henry of N"'•porl
Beach aOO Kenneth Edwards
of TuSiln.
Single i:arents art invlled to
cont:i,ct A!ri. Joan Gardner
8.13-1329, llr informalio!'I about
the f'h!l f•ter, \lthlch atsn i!
planning a .pancake b,'f.l'lkf r>::I.
In Costa trfesa City Psi·k r.n
Sw1day, Jur~ 29, from 9 a.m.
lo noon.
PIANO STYLIST
Jacqueline Nims
Rally of Cars
Gets in Gear
fl.1embers of Gam'lla Gam-
ma Chapter. Epsilon Sigma
Alpha International, w i I I
gather for their first car rally
Sunday, June 29.
The rally, entitled Crown of
Creation, 11.·ill gel under way
al 10 a.m. with registration for
drivers and na\·igators begin·
nlng al 9:30 a.m. Regi~lration
fee will be $2.
Trophies and prizes will be
offered. For furl her In·
formation those interested
may call Shelli Ertel, 547-3711.
Cake Frosting
Class Offered
"'hat ls , more important
than the frwting oa the cakf!'!
All those who would like to
crtale cake masterpieces for
special occasions may learn
how to make flowers, ruffles
aad border5 of !rosllng In a
specla1 summer class epening
JuJy 1 and 2.
Teenage and .adull cake
decorating classes will be
taught by Ellen Wulff, under
the sponsorship of the Sant;:a
Ana Recreation and Pnrk
Departmont, ln lht Santa Ana
Community Center Clubhouse
Anntx.
Recipient of numerous
honors and awards, she is a
representative of C a m p u s
Crusade for Christ Intema·
tional and presents her Fan·
tasia for numerous la rge
social gatherings which fre-
quently are hosted by wives of
gtivemors or mayors.
The patriotic piano styling is
a salute to women whose
husbands serve in the Armed
Forces overseas, particularly
in Vietnam.
Reservations, at $3, are
being accepted by Mrs. Harold
Fischer, 962-1129, and !ltrs.
William O'Brien, Ma-3070.
Procedures
Established
Three oUicers from Orange
District are attending the
stale board meeting of
California Federation of
Women's Clubs. Junior
Membership, taking place to-
day through tomorrow in the
Newporter Inn.
Attending are f\lr s. Terry
Thomas. Orange 0 i s t r i c t
president ; lilrs. Arthur Korn,
Area D vice president, and
Mrs. f'rant Hughes .
parliamentarian and s t a t e
convention chairman far 19?0.
Tht meeting will provide the
necessary specifications and
oroctdures ror all the in-
dividual federated j 11 n I o r
women's clubs in lhe sl4te.
HB TOPS Club
Allen School is the meetin1
place for members of nun· NYLON KNIT TOP
tlngton Beach TOPS Pound $9.00 Ptnchers at 7 p.m. ••8'7 Mon· Available in eight groovy colors-S.M.L day, ._ ________ .._ _______________ _
•
' ,
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' '
PLANE CHECK -Nancy Cunningham, Newport Beach Powder Puff Derby
contestant, checks racing numbers for 23rd annual All·Women Transcontinen·
tal Air Race on July 4. She and other area contestants will depart from San
Diego and finish al Dulles International in Washington, D.C.
Area Pilots Up • Air
As Derby Date Nears
By EVELYN SHERWOOD
Ol lllt t14111Y P'llOI Stiff
Three Area women pilots
will be competing in the 23rd
annual Powder Puff Derby,
July 4, lea\'ing Lindbergh
Field, San Diego, to finish
2,515 miles away at Dulles
International Airport,
Washington, D.C.
They are N a n c y Cun-
ningham of Corona del Mar,
who will pilot her own plane
with Mary Clare Reedy of
Newport Beach, a pilot with
helicopter rating, as co-pilot.
Mara Culp of Newport
Secretaries
Orange County-Harbor Area
Legal Secretaries Association
meets the third Wednesday of
the month in various places.
Further information may be
obtained by calling Miss
Sheron Dresser, 5 4 0 • 0 9 5 0.
Members gather at 7 p.m.
Beach, a charter pilot wilh
Martin Avialion, Orange Coun-
ty Airport, will fly solo on her
first race and Thon Griffith of
Cost.a Mesa will fly co-pilot for
a San Diego contestant.
"We were late entries,"
Nancy Cunningham, a tall at·
tractive blonde related. "Rac-
ing is a challenge. The plane
was ready, waiting to go and
so were we. " This will be a
first race for both.
Daylight flying with visual
flight rules will govern the
race for the 95 planes com-
peting.
Two stops are , mandatory,
one at SaJt Lake City, Utah,
and the other at Mt. Vernon,
Ill.
There are d esignated
overnight and refueling st.ops
along the route.
Trophies and cash P,riWI
amounting to '8,500 will be
awarded the winners.
Scoring is figured on a han-
dicapped basis from data
furnished by plane manufac-
turers.
Two contestants will be rac·
Ing for the J7th time.
Fran Bera of Long Beach, a
seven-time winner with 17,000
flying hours will be flying for
the 19th time in the annual
v.·omen's flying classic.
Westward Ho
Conclave Told
Mrs. Herbert Jennings of
Laguna Beach will host a
meeting foc Westward Ho
Chapter, Daughters of the
British Empire at 12:30 p.m.
Monday, June 30.
All women of British an·
cestry are welcome to join the
monthly conclave. Furthu in-
fonn'ation may be obtained by
calling Mrs. John Harold, 494-
9511 or Mrs. Jenninp, 494·
lll45.
. -
Horoscope
·P-isces:-Ef"forts _._
Gain Rewards
SATURDAY
JUNE 28
By SYDNEY OMARI\
TEEN DATING HINTS•
One wbo pim most atteutloa
.. SAGm.UUUS. Bat LEO t•
mott creative and pla1 moat
af!e<llon. Ideal mate Is fladbll
oakf-way t•eater or
resturuL Try oometblnf iii·
f.,..L Edacattoaat pnjed
may MUd sqaart:, bat prOYH
omtlq. SCORPIO Is likely 1o
get tbe dtect. GD«NI 1W.rta
plu.nlng a permaneat rea...
tionllllp. CAPRICORN 1ets
stroage.r u eveatag pro-
greaea. LIBRA COlllet ap wttb
brtgbt Ideas, dlspla11 bamor
and coald be We of aay
gatberlag.
ARIES (Marci> 2l·Aprll 19):
What appears good and far is
only an illusion. The grass on.
ly seems greener across the
way. You benefit from home,
family environment. SUck to
what you know. Entertain
special visitor.
TAURUS (Apr II 20-Moy
20): You may be harboring
fa1 se belief about money,
possessions. Best to be skep-
t ical. Ask to be shown.
Without proof, you leave
yourself open to deception. Act
accordingly.
GEMINI (May 2J-Tune 20):
You can't get wbai"!°ou want
by being self-anerUve. Almost
the opposite course i s
necessary. Means you may
have to play shrinking violet
role. What you need comes to
you.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Soft approach is necessary.
Study Gemini message. No
day to insist, foree or cajole.
Take care of your h e a I t h.
Avoid excess in speed, drink·
ing and eating. Magnify con-
cept of moderatJon.
LEO (J u I y 23-Aug. 22):
Good lunar aspect today co-
incides with chance for con-
structive change. Loved ones
benefit. Accent on being
creative. Lead rather than
follow. Be original and in·
dependent.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Practical measures produce
results. What you accomplish
today colors future potential.
Know this and a c t ac.
conlingly. S. aware ol details.
Forego short cuts. SUck to
routine.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Y QU .INY _"ant to mo_ve too
quJckly. Thero Is dllllnct
pos!tbllity of journey. You e:1-
pand activities. Your senae of
humor comes to fore. You
reeelve message from
relative.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 11):
What you own and what you
would like to posseM may be
two dilferent things. Be pa.
tient -and shrewd. You can
get what you need. Utilize
mature judgmenL
SAGl'ITAlllUS (Nov. 22-
llec. 21 ): Cycle b I g h.
Circumstances tum ln your
favor. Make new lt'.arts in new
di"'1Clials. Empbaaiu oriJrina1
approach. Be indepenOent.
Di!play pioneering spiril
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
19): Fine for attendirig
theater. Study your fantasies.
Many can be transfonned to
realities. What you need today
is reassurance from famlly
member.
AQUAlllUS (Jaa. 21H'eb.
18): Don't believe everything
you bear. Dig beneath surface
indications. You have chance
to gain real knowledge . Be
skepUcal but keep open mind..
PISCES (Feb. If.March 20):
You are rewl:lrded for efforts.
Standing in community is
elevated. Promotion la due.
Accept a d de d aS!lgnment.
You meet success by a~ In.< responsibility.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are due for
significant changes. Romance
is featured. You are a
dynamic individual w i t h
orlglnal Ideas.
Seniors Co II
All Hobbies
Are you a senior citizen with
a special hobby to lhare with
others? Newport Harbo r
Senior ClUzens are gathering
together a 11peclal hobby show
at lhe~e Jb display
on Monday, J~
Specially requested a re
!terns o( sewing, kn1Wng,
painting, ceramics, antiques
or collections o( any klnd.
The group will meet at 10
a.m. and lhe regular games of
cards will follow the hobby
show viewing. For further fn.
fonnaUon about pa.rticlpatina
In the event, persons may c11l
Mrs. Aaron Christemen, 248-
8694,
------,;),----.Jll
-----. --------
'~"*'· Junt 'l'f, 1969
New 'Skull Look'
-Los.s-of_ Locks
Turns to Gain
NEW 'STEW'
Vicki Lynn Foll
Graduate
In the Air
. Among graduates earning
the sliver wings of a n
American Airlines stewardess
from the airlines college in
Fort Worth, Tex., was Miss
Vickie Lynn Fell ol WestmJn.
Iler.
The daughter ot Gerald N.
Fell of Westmlnlter has been
assigned !light duty out ol
New York City. She attended
college in Sacramento before
training at the atewardea col·
Jege.
Teenager
Volunteers
Summoned
By DD WEDEMEYEI\
NEW YORK (AP) -Nooml
&ms, the 21.y..,...ld Nqro
model who m>do lllDOUI the
skull lool:, mcl>od the top
When abo WU lollq bor hllr.
"'lb• doctor Aid ..... poi>.
pie develop uJcen. parbapo
your balr doesn't grow," ex-
plained Miss Sims, who !GUiid
ahe wu eaUng lesl and wor·
rying more u she Jaunched a
modellng car<er.
"I was atarving myJelf,"
she said. "I wanted hip cheek
bones. Bui I simply can't 1et
them."
She gave up oa b1ah chffk
bones and slicked lier . hair
clown close to her bead, at-
tached halrpleoes and thus
creat.d her now lamoua skull
look. Sbe tlarled uUag again
and pJned IO pOunds whlcb went unnoUced oa her a.foot
10.lncb lrame. Sbe now ,..1g11s
115 pounds, and her hair Is
growlJ1I back.
The dau1hter of •
worker abo Aid abo ,,.... hod
"DY -abo coold 111oceod ID the la..blon world.
0 It wu the most natural
thing," she said ... People have
told mo I WU protty linoe I
an -11111 di upptd Cl!ll; of
ICbool. Almoat luontdW-b'
aht .............. ..,...b ...
fea. .•
'!'be !Int -k """ -evwy day. 'nM!i !or II .......
abo dldn~ wwk at .U.
"I WU to worried but U. I
dkl • televlaSoa commerdal ...
llhe said. "N°" I don't w«l'J'.I know always there l a aomethlnr around the eorner.••
Anlund the comer -bor aeledlon ·u the Ont Macro
model to -.. the -ot • JD1jor womeo~"""· Ladles ff!'!"" J ; 1l>o
Ont to clO color Plf'I ID v..,,., and & tnp 1o 1!iUnpe
for Time mapzJne.
This -· """ -ln Paris !or the WI -In the nw ~ abo bopesln
wrtle I boolc !or Ntcro-
to -the hlmdreda of ID-
quJriea she -i,_ Negro women lbaut ma~
EVf!lltuallT abo -llio • rive up modelq 11111 P'*'N1. ilJroct I film.
Mia Simi aald llhe bas n·
perlenc:ed pnjudlcl , .. llil>el
In her Ule. "Tllere la a pilot
wben beauty--judice, .. abt Ilic!.
was a llU!o flrL When I wu1;:::========:;
14, I aid I wanted to do •
cover ol Vogue. I had •
luclnaUon with -.netics. I
wasn't allowed to wear them
but I'd try them oa 1t home."
Are~ at leut 16 years ol.d In June 11117, she came to
and willing to volunteer u 1 New York to study design on a
chaperone for a child 00 scbola.rshtp at the Fuhlon
ouUngs to such appeallnc Imtitute of Technology. Sbe
places as D~neyland this sum-lnqulnd about the (IO"lbW\l' mer? of earnlna extra money and wu introdUced to a friend of a The Newpon Beach Parks, lrlend ol a Photolrapller. On
S.ach and RecreaUon Depart• h llrst ·-'--t she
ment is seeking 100 volunteers r:!de the ~·~ New
to ald In their 11Ul1Uller pro-York Times magazlnt. w-llft Plau .,.,. OolJ gram ol taking IOO Harbor
Area youngsters on th • Alter that abo -llooded 6 4 2 • 2 4 4 4
Disneyland trip July I, and 300...,::wi;:th:=roqu=:ests=:.,:Sb:;•=:ll:p:;lod=wl=th=========~ or more to Sea World on July1r
16, to Universal Studios on
Aug. 13 and to Ringling Broll.
Barnum ind Baile¥ Circus,
Aug. 20.
Teens 'Who wish to join
OperaUon OuUO( may call the
Volunteer Bureau between t
and 12, 642-0963 or Kathy
Bankerd, Marinera Park, ff2.
Ola9 lrom 9 to 8.
Volunteer chaperones wUJ be
given free bus transportation
and free admiaalon to the
eventll.
EUROPEAN MUSIC TOUR
IMMACULATE HEART COLLEGE
$767
Scho<lo!H TWA ...-1111s h NOT• -FIPtl
Jaly 22 • A11gu1t 12
7 Countrl••, Music, Special Even+t, Sl9hhffin9, Loc1I
Guid••· Optional Exten•lon -S~fn and Porfu9al.
4 Unllt of Crodit-lllo Cl!•rgo.
,_ .. _,.,,, MA•ILYN MAYU.ND,'T-L1 .. w
2030 Holy DrlYa, Apr. C. H..,•oo4 Coif. , ....... 12111 ... ,..,..,
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Al•-... ---PRESENTS THREE
SAN FRANCISCO aqen uonm
3 D.\YS / 2 NIGHTS
AU THREE'
TOURS INCLUDE:
A 1m1 -II SH F111<ir<o~
Jllljot ·--• -Goll lridp • tlle wifl rn. Twl• Pab
• Seal Rocls ... Cliff ff-•
IQssioo DolGns • Palace ollflat
Ms • ~ hit • 1111 PnoWlo
• Fort ._ • Sell Clfff • CoWll
Goll l'lit • -WoodlanU, Faw ltesllmltilf Atas, ladles
1-. ... -.,r--·
Wllorhol I"""' al T-'•
• Deluxe Del Webb TownHouse ac-
commed1tiw (3 day>/2 oiafrtl)
• Round trip lrlnsfers: from Sa1'
Fr1ncisco or Qakl1nd Airport to
'the downtown Airlll'll!I Ttrminal
• Taliob from Ille Tenniftal lo tilt
TownH""" & ntum (hod. tip)
Ala OAU . .O•MIA REDWOOOS&~ iu,lrftf ~
Travel across the Goldt1 lilt•
lhiUUgb Iha wotld·--cl
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Muir Woods. Stroll 1111.1t1 tt11
fabled redwood>-1,CMll Jiii' ~
giants Niq ...,. tiln 300 fMI '""'the"""' ft• ..• nhlllllltlblel
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. JU• OALIFORNIA
CHOPSTICKS~ & SEALIFE
BlUlllD 1our
A pided tour of Chinatown. Hur
storiti ef ttie '1nner city." Discover
eioltc shops and bazaarL After
dark. 1n authentic Chinese dinner
completes this unique adventure.
Marine World will introduce you lo
a lastinatinc display of sealife
{1¥ill! transportation & 1dmission).
PRICES ..... "'""'twill .,...... ..... (ta.) ·····-·· .. $51.1$
DH•ll
(UM .... ) HM ........... _.$31,15
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AIR CAUFOll.NIA
MAJESTIC • COASTLINE ··
11111111 &OU
Travel tflt Peninsula and ICfOSI
luoh Slnta Clan Val~y. IJln<ti lo
Los Galos, lhen follow the speclJc.
ular coaslllnt to the beaut} of "11
famed 17-mlle Drive. Yo11'll Yisil
Old Moat..,y, Pacific c-. Pebb~
Beith+ the Salinas Valley and more.
Brin11 Clftltra!
PRICES ~-..., twlll
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Cons11mers:
Crime Does
TOP MUTUAL
FUND PlltODUCR
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li1kttf offico i11 N1•porf lo1ch.
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JI bAILY PllOT F rldlf, J11nt 27, 1969
2 Latin Nation·s on Brink of War Over Soccer . •
MEXICO CITY (UPI) -Mako CUy
])Olice moblliied a 1,700-rrwa security -rm '° prevent trouble-at tonll;bt'1 aoc·
cer playoff be.tween feudin& Honduras
and El Salvador.
•
The 11me, last in the three--za.me series
that will decide which country advances
in rt&1ooal finals to next year'• World
Cup soccer champ&onsblps, comes leas
than H boars after El Salvador bnikt
dlplomatk rtlatloo! wllb Hoodur11.
The Honduras Air Force put five
lrussporl planes at the SfTVice of jg
coontry'1 soccer fans for free trips to
Muico Cit.Y'• neutral turf for the game.
100,000
Cub Fans
Expected
CHICAGO (AP) -The drqging SL
Louis cardinals invade pandemonium·
struck Wrigley Field today in cfaOIU of
euJping the same medicine from the ram-
paging Cubs that the Cards 1pooned out
in winning the 1968 pennant.
• For one thing, Cardinal Manqer Red
Schoendienst hi.a to eat his boast on hi5
club's first trip in April that "the nett
time we show up in Chicago we'll be in
first place."
The Cards enter a four-game series
destined to pack Wrigley Field with more
than 100,000 fans this weekend trailln&
the remarkable Cubs by 12 games in the
National League's Ea.st Diviaion.
Second place New York ta1s by 11,.;
games.
Afte r the Cubs won a 10-lmtlng, homer-
packed 7-5 decision for a four·game
sweep against Pittsburgh Thursday, Cub
!.tanager Leo Durocher uaerted:
"At Pittsburgh a week ago, the Pirates
beat us four straight and were crying 'we
got them now.' So they came to town
61h games behind and 'they waltzed out
IOI> behind. '
''The Cardinals v.·on the pennant last
year beating the clubs they had to beat.
That's what we aim to do and we'll plly
like hell against them this weekend."
Jim Hickman. one of the Cubs pla·
tooning right.fielders who be_lted a game·
winning, two-run homer 1n .the 10th
·against the Pirates Thursday, viewed the
Card series pretty much the same way.
"There'• still three months to go, but
Jt's sWI a big series. If they play four
good games, they'll hurt us. If we play
four good games, we hurt them much
worse," said Hickman.
Hickman's decisive blow was the fou~
Cub homer of the seven-homer game in
which the Pirates lost their 13th straight
at Wrigley Field since July 1968.
The see-saw game drew a .weekday
gtancling-room crowd or 40,334, including
29,473 paid in the ladies' day attraction.
The remarkable thing about the Cub
sweep against the Pirates was the fact. it
' was achieved with a patched lineup, m-
c\uding rookie catcher Xen Rudolph,
whose first major league homer Thurs·
day was a two-run blast "knotting the
score at 3-3 in the sii:th.
Regular catcher Randy Hundley, !piked
two days ago, may face the Cardinals to-
day. Meanwhile, the Cubs expect. llar se·
cond baseman Glenn Beckert, who suf·
fered a broken thumb three week.! ago, to
get back into action this weekend.
And Sunday, iron-man CUb Billy
Williams should break Stan Musial's
league record of 89S consecutive games in
the second game of a twin bill with the
Cardinals.
OuUiekler Williams in his 892nd
~traight game Thursday cracked a first·
inning homer and made a game-turning
throw to cut down a Pirale runner at
third In the loth inning.
"I hope they don't surprise me too
much with a between-games ceremony.
because thi s is really a big moment in
my baseball career," said Williams.
Three in Tie
At Cleveland
CLEVELAND IAP) -Orville Moody. a
re<:ent refuge from obscurity, is a man
with a mission.
··1 donl want to be the Open champion
who never won anything elae," said the
ruddy-faced Old Sarge who came out of
nowhere and won the national cham·
pionship.
"l'd hate that. I don't mean l have to
win everything, but as I.be National ()pen
cl\ampk>n, I want to pily well, there'd be
salisfacUon in that.··
Moody, on the rebound from a bout
wilh IOnsUlltls, made the observaUon
Tburld1y alter he had luhloned 1 threo·
under Pll' 67 Ille! tied red-hot Charles
Coody Ille! iot1I shot Jm}' McGee !or the
!lnWound leld In the IU0,000 Clevtland
'Open Goll Tournament.
· Just ape stroke back at ca wu a trio of ~tJve unknowns. George Hluon, who
11ol Into the !ltld ooly becaUIO ol a late
:Wttbdrlwat. Bob SIO!lt, a club pro from
Independence, Mo., and Cnar Sa.nudo.
: A h.,. group !ollowtd at It, Including
Pw"llt SHI~, l'nnt Beard, Bruce
Crampton and Al B1ldln1.
Delonct~1~plon O.vt Stocl<lon 1nd Dile Duu wJnner of last week's
Kemper ()pm, were In the IJ'OllP 1t 10
wlllJe moat ol the pme'• top 01111t1 wtro
wdl bad.
SalvadonaM were reported chartering
airlines.
Sal\'adorun reilder.t! of lbe Me.Jean
capital took out newspaper ads calllnC on
lhelr countrymen to turn out and "givt a
:shout of support for our team in its dif·
ficult encounter with the Honduran!."
Pollce, anxious to prevent rioting like
that which followed the first two matches
in Honduras and EJ Salvador, put a 1,700-
man force on a1ut.
Raul Mendiolea, .actin& Mezlco City
poUce chief, warned both a.Ides to
••behave."
International soccer authorities had
ordered the playo!I ad In Mexloo to cool
tern~ on both !lM1.
Tbe dlplomaUc breach grew out of
rivalry on the. IOOCer field, where fana
from each coontry attacked the olher'1
national team earlier this month here and
1n Honduras.
Rioting and destruction followed, Hon·
duraa gave Salvadoreal'IS %4 hours to
leave Honduras, El Sa1vador charged
Honduras with "genocide" and both n•
Uons appealed for an international in-
vesU1aUon.
1be: feud was sparked by a three·aame
series of aoccer matcbe11 to determine •
regional finalllt for nett yev's World
Cup champlonehJps.
Aft.er Honduras beai l!:I Salvador'• na·
tlooal team 1-0 In the fint match June. I,
the vLsiting Salvadoreans complained that
the Tegucigalpa. fans mobbed them with
sticks and stones and attacked cara bear-
ing Salvadorean Jlcense plates.
The next Sunday the Honduran team
went to San Salvador, and was beaten.
Salvadorean faM rloted and the Army
moved in to break it up. Two mm died in
the fracas and the Honduran team bad to
sneak out ot town.
Reprisals ' in Honduras a g a I n a t
YANK SURVIVOR -Arthur Ashe, one of the 16
singles entrants sWI alive at the Wimbledon tennis
championsbtps, returns a shot during his match
a struggle, but Ashe finaly prevailed, 6-2, 6-1 , 6-2,
13-15, 12-10. Five of the remaining 16 are Amert·
cans.
with England's Graham Stilwell 'Thursday. It was
Sports Clipped Short
Allen Ready to Apologize
PHlLADELPIIlA -Rich Allen, the
Philadelphia Phillies star first baseman
awpended for missing a game, says he
wanU to apologize.
Allen appeared Thursday nighl with
disc jockey Sonny Hobson, a friend, on
radio station WHAT.
During the exchange, Allen said, "I'd
like to make it publicly known that I'd
like to apologize to my manager, my
teammates and to the fans of
PhiladelphiL
The small-minded people here who see
me in the wrong will have to learn how to
accept it. The real fans are the ones I'd
like to apologize lo,"
Earlier Thursday Allen's manager, said
he planned to tell the sl!Jiger to "take his
medicine and lf he has any gripe! to wait
until nut season to iron them out."
•
NEW YORK -Former boxing grca.t
Joe Louis was reported "resting com·
fortably" in a hospitaJ today after he col·
lapsed on a lower 1'1Anhattan :street
Thur5day.
At first, It '!'.'as feared that the ~year·
old Louis had suffered a heart attack. but
a later report said the collapse was due
to a phy!ical breakdown.
A spokesman at Beekman-Downtown
Hospital said the ex-heavyweight king
was in "good" condiUon. He was ex·
pect.td to remain in the hospital :or
observation for a few days.
•
NEW YORK -Former quarterback
Joe Namath and football commissioner
Pete Rozelle met for two hours Thursday
wllhout reaching any settlement of their
dispute over Namath's ownership of an
east side nightclub.
Negotiations are expected to continue.
''Commissioner Rozelle met with Joe
Namath this afternoon for a long talk," a
spokesman at the commbsioner's office
said. ''Nothing was resolved and it ls ex-
pected they will mett again."
Later. Namath said "my position
hasn 'L changed and neither has his."
•
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. -Charles
"Bud" Wilkinson, one of the nat,ion's
most succusfuJ college coaches, has been
named to the National Football Foun-
dation and Hall of Fame.
During 17 years as head coach of
Oklahoma, Wilkinson's teams compiled a
139·27-4 record, Including 47 consecutive
victories from 195"3 to 1957.
\Vllkinson was named 1llursday from a
field oC live finalists, including Ray Ello!,
Tl Ii no is; Frank Leahy, Boston College and
Notre Dame; Homer Norton, Texa.s
A&M, and Lawrence "Buck" Shaw, Slala
Clara and Air Force Academy.
•
PENSACOLA, Fla . -Peggy Wilaon"1
dream of fame II years a10 might come
true if she holds on to her lead in the
'30,000 Women 's Open Golf Cham-
pionship.
The chunky 34-year~ld Florida pro-
ressional, who slarled playing golf after
she dreamed of the lhriU of competing
brfore a huge gallery, fired r lwo-under·
par 71 Thursday for a one-stroke margln
going into today's second round of the
most prtstigious \'!'omen's tournament or
them all.
Sil-followed, IDll tho ... ..,,.
meot.Jhere declll'ld the eipulejon drive
qalnsl 5alvld«una wtlhoul propu
papers.
Wednelday nJPt, the Pnaidall ol llon-
duru, o.n. °""aldo Lopes Anllano, had
1weafed to hil n1tlan !or "tranqulllly In
thete dilllcull ......U." Be Wled his
people "nol to molesl further the
Salvldoram """"" 111, nor their bolon1-lng1, u they will be our best wttna1ea"
before u 1ntemaUona1 court.
Lopes hid -!Ofl!llltlon o! a
le1al commlsalon to study the crisis.
Honduran lonlp mlnilter Carin
CllUllo aald hil cauntry _,Id ao bolore
UM lnttr-Amtrlcao !lumen RJahis COm·
million to charge El S&lvador with "rape
of our women, insult&, automobllel
destroyed, and mocking the Honduran
llq: and nallooaJ anthem."
El Salvador earlier had charged l1on-
duru bef«e the aame commia&lon wltli
"1enoclde, murder, persecuUon, attacks,
peraonal and property damage and
muslve expulsions of Salvadoreans.,.
Honduras declared a ban on all trade
with El s.Ivador and diplomata feared
the criata could wreck the fraa:ile c:entral
American common markel
Wimbledon Action
Laver, Emerson
Stop Opponents
WIMBJ.EOON, Eorlaod (AP) -Dtlen-
ding champion Rod Laver of Coroqa del
Mar no<pt lnlo the !ourlh round ol the
Al~Engtand Tl!Ollb Championships loday
with a 1-3, 1-3, 1-3 viciory over Jan
Lel<:hly of Denmark.
And Newport Btach"s Roy Emerson
mov ed forward by stopping Great Bri·
tain's Stanley Mathews on Thursday, 1-3,
f.1, a.i. Then today he eoilshed off
Grteee'• Nicky KalogeropouJos, 7-5, 6-3,
6-2.
He was joined by Australian, Frtd
Stolle, who ou'ted. Milan Holoctk of
Cz:echo!lovaJda f..2, 6-4, 8-2.
Julie Heldman of New York became
the flnt American woman to enter the
round of 1& 1'htn she defeated Dtni&e
Carter o! Los Altos, Calli., 6-2, 6-3.
She was joined shorUy afterward ~y
Margaret Michel of Pacific PaJisack!.
who won over Anita Van Deventer of
S...th Africa M, 6-2.
-The crowdJ at Wimbledon can help
to defeat a teMia atar -even a cool old
campaigner like Ken Rosewall.
The 34-year-old Australian, upstt by
Bob Lutz of Loi Angeles In the third
round Thursday, confesstd that for the
first Ume in his career the fans dilturbed
his concentration.
It's New Skit
By Dodgers:
Who's in First
By TllE ASSOCIATED PRESS
With apologies to Abbott and Costello,
the Los Anceles Dodam and Atlanta
Braves are staging their own little
baRball skit called Who's 1n Flnit.
Thursday night's episode, Nrrinl Bill
Sina:er and Wiilie Divis, went to the
Dodger Slate
Ju,,. n. o= " i:" 0!!!!• 7:55 •·'"" 11:1<1 l"'I J""' 21. 0 «•at 11 O"W/:. 1:U •·'"·• kl"I ..0 1::::: £: o°"'~ .. ·i..::.i:.n. 'ms .'.~'! t~Tr.:t•
Dodgers 3.0, vaulting them back Into flrat
plate in the NaUonll League Wesl by
one-half game over the Braves.
The Dodgen had held or shand HCOnd.
place until lhey caught and pa!.!led the
Braves Iut weekend.
They fell back to second Wednesday
night for 24 houn, but promptly overtook
the Braves again behind Singer's four·hit
pltchln& and Davia' homer and two runs
batted ln.
Singer started the winning rally with
a single in the llUrd, moved to HCOOd on
Maury Wills' single and scored on Willie
Davis' infield bouncer.
The play also allowed Willa to score.
with tile little shorlstop duhlng home on
Sonny JacUon'• lhrowlnc error.
Davis padded the margin with his
seve nth home run of the aeaaon in the
:sixth.
The game. ended the currtnt seriea
between the b1tUer1 for the NaUonal
League'• West Division lead. Los Anctles
left with a half-&ame ed.&e over the
Braves.
LOI AN•ILll ATLANTA
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The match WU on Wimbledon"s No. 3
court, where the fans can wander in and
out without paying extra admlwion
money. The patlui: on either side wtre
jampacked as Rosewall slid to defeat.
Right oppoalte is an Illuminated
scoreboard showing the state of the
match on lhe center court.
''l was conscious of the fans jostling
and pushlng to try to see the match,"
Rosewall nld.
"They were watching the scoreboard as
well as our match. They cheered
sometimes when Graham SUlweU got a
J:IOlnt against Arthur Ashe.
"It was the worat kind or match to
have on center court at the time, I mp-
pose -a Brlllilh player against Ashe.
Naturally, the fans were excited.
"Then there was a man in unJform
trying to control the crush and ahouting
to people to keep moving and oot block
the entrance. And I could hear buses and
heavy truckJ ljUnl>llng past the gate.
"All this didn't seem to upset Bob LulZ,
but it upset me."
The rans who watched Lutz triumpli
over Rosewall 8-7, 7-9, 6-3. 6-2 were just a
part of the 30,000 who thronged the all·
England club.
Enthusiasm for tennis is skyhigh here
-partJy because of the publicity given to
Pancho Gonzale.'s victory over Olarlie
Pawell.
That match, spread over Tuesday and
Wednesday, broke all records by lasting
112 game!, it was given biqer headlines
in the British press than any other
Wimbledon match in years.
Ashe, atlll atruullng to find his form,
won a jltlery malcb against SWwell 6-2,
l.f, 6-2, l:H5, 12-10. r.=s= <•-llldlcttn 1"rof .. 11otwll J!llOY l!mll"fOll, N1wporl l1t ch, cllfH!ad S!tn!cY
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Tiwlrnlf koch tlld tcll5Gll Meroct1r!11D l r•iH, dat.•tfd J1frfi1 "'"to l••YO •nd l'llrlclo Aodr1Que1, Chllt, 6-J. ._,. W. 0.11111 Conttl end l"rel\eol1 Jt\ff'lrt!. Fr111c:f, ct.IHtld 11<911 lll!.lltt:IMY Ind All•tndtr Mttrt .... J~ "'°'•I•. 4-J. ..... t-7. klft l"~t Auttr•l:ir.•lld And'rn G1n.llD. $0t1r1t llffHIW "'"""' Gll!lr• • lOI Anoeltt •ncl Ttm M~~. l1<-1l1Y,. Ctl I .• ,., .. ,, 7.5, .. l Clt rk Grtt&Nr. l'tW Yor-. 1r>a EUii-!cntt. St. Jt"""• N.Y., ""lllld Protmlll LIU Ind JelcllD Mul<1rlt1, lllDll , ""'i-4.. ~.
"ltrr,t l•rtfttji, Frtric:t1~ el\d Nlrt1r .. Ille. "i:"l'Mcr~i7.'t'i &r'"' •rid Rl(l\erl 0.11, ~~111. Soiilh Alrlce, •lld RCl!ltr Ttvlor. a 11111, d9lH1..i "•lrllft krag Ind Ttrrv t11v1n, Sou1h • Afrlc.t • ._J. t,1• ._._ Jtl' Lek11 'I' Ind Ju,..,, Ulrldl, o.im.rt, cl""tlld
0.... llflth+Oll ttlcl M. Ctrl1~n. lwtc1911, w. 11·10. lJ.11, .. 1.
Phillips Sees
Some Light;
Pilots Arrive
Lefty Philllps, who celebrate! his first
month today as manager of the
California Angels, aees Improvement in
his team, despite its last place st.andin&
in the American League's West division.
'lbe Ana:el! flnd out how much when
they open a weekend series tonight with
AK9el Slate
J~IMI tf, Mltll =· \£). J:Q _p .rn., kMf'e ,_ ~ AM111 n 7: P.m., l';Ml"C tno1
JUM """:r."' atlll, lt1 1.m. KM .. C 17111 J-• Nil~ el Kwu1 (Ill'. $;2i e.m .• ICMl'C
Toomey Shooting for World Record
lht expansion Seattle Ptlots in a twlnigtrt
doubleheader. George Brunet, 3-6, and
Grti Wa1hbum, 0.1, pitch for California
qa!nit Marty Pattin, 7-4, and Mike
Marshall, 1-t.
"Our pitching has been okay and we've
been hitUng sharper," Phillips said after
bing to Minnesola 7--4 Thuraday af.
temoon. "Tho&e are plusses. But thtte
were thret: fly balls that should tiave been
caqht and they hurt us most or all.'• BAKERSFIELD (AP) -"I think
I'm cap1ble of breakina the! world record.
but m)' fJrst thought Is Wlnnln&, '' 81Q
Toomey , the Olympie dectthlon chJim-
pion, h)'I.
The ».ye1r-old Toomey defends his
AAU Dec.thlon Chlmplon1hlp (he's won
II four 1tral&ht years) tonighl tind Satur·
day nllht at Bakenlleld College.
"I don 't know ff I'm In aooct '"°"'h
lhape for 1 workt record," u_ld Toomey,
of Lacuna Btac.h.
"It's h•rd to gel up for these meets."
The event wu scheduled July +.s in ' Salina, Kin., slte of the 1966 meet, but
was cblnged wbtn Toomey, Ru5s Hodge
and met Sloan complained of conditions
in sauna.
Toomey iiaJd athletes competed In 100-
dtlf« temper1tures in Salina.
"'Our moUvallon prlm1rlly was for lhe
athletes:,·• be ujd nursday. "The people
I
of K1n1as tte more than gracioug but the
temperatures aren't quite. ao kind."
1'he president of the MIS80Wi Valley
AAU, Dr. Johll Boierl o! Kansas City,
hu said the if'OlJ'P will tttlc fUU com-
ptnsatlon from the N1tlonaJ MU Tract
And Field Committee (or expenses In-
curred b~· the Salina Chamber of Com-
merce in prcparlng tor the cham·
plonshlp1.
The world record that Toomey 11 aim-
ing at in &kenfltld Is held by
Gumany'1 Kurl Btndlln -1,111 polnls.
Toomey'• betn ovrr 1,000 pointl aeven
Umes thl.I ytar.
Othtt top narntt tnttttd are Jeff Ban-
nister o! the Unlvmlty ol Ntw
HamJ)6hJre, JoM Warkentin of Frtioo
Sltle and Roy Kenward a University of
Colorado freshman.
The .. inner Ille! runntrup will be
America·1 tnlrhl In tht dec1thlon In a
tr1ct aod !Ith! m"' with Ruula In thr ..
wew 1t the Loo Ans•••• Collstum.
I
MllU•IMTA CALllfOltNIA • .,,.,... ••r~"l Utllttlllltr. cf j I 1 0 Alonler, "' J I ! T-r, ,. $ t 2 t A.ltodr11Vo11, .. 4 t 1 I
Oll'l .. tf $2t2,tlfOM,.u JltO 11:1111t1r1W. a ' t t J ltelcllerdt, w , 1 , 1
R .... e.l• •l)IMOr!Ofl.rt 4121
MMVll,11 JOOOAKUl,c 1110
Ol,ttll(I, 2ll I 0 0 I Hldll, 1~ I l I I
ltOMMro.c 4011111-1.tl 110 0
C.rll-1. II l 0 1 I lltllll , pl! I 0 0 0
k•tt. • t I • • l .J0111111111. cl 1 1 o o Nfllln. iitl I I I I McClolf!U11, 11 t O O O
Wlnfl .. IOl'I. • I I 0 0 """"'· !Ill 1 I I O Ttttlo )t 1 II 6 Tt11'1 JI I 11 ~ M~I 000 !OJ till -1
1c1llflmll IOI 011 001 -4
HB Loop Leaders
Shoot Down Rivals
Palmer
IACKSWING MOVfMENTS t.'IJST IE PRECISE
The unbeatens remained
unbeaten 'lburtday nleht In
the rourth l'OUDd of gamei in
the Huntington Beach Summer
Prep Basketball League,
Huntington Beach, Rancho
Alamitos and Garden Grove
all improved their marks to 4-
0. setting up at least one
showdown Tuesday evening
v.·hen the Oilers and Garden
Grove square oU in Hun-
tington's gym at 7 p.m.
The Oilers encountered stub-
born resistance fnnn Edison
Thursday but finally prevailed
by 61).51), Garden Grove nudg·
ed Corona del Mar, 41...16, and
Rancho AJamttos smothered
Bolsa Grande, '77·53.
Newport Harbor, loser by
two to Huntington Tuesday,
bounced back to beat Marina,
S&-60. Westminster tripped
Fouatain Valley, 66-46, and
Villa Park whipped La Quinta,
6a-52, In remalnlna: games
Thursday.
Newport, pounded 1w by
Marina in the lint period,
reversed the tables with a 2J..
l& margin in the last quart.er
to win going away. Lee Haven
led the Tars with 11 points: and
improving Dave Eccles added
15.
The Yikes were pl•ying
without vacationing K 1 p p
Baird and lacked board mus·
cle. Still, they opened quickly
with a 14-3 lead. Newport
didn't calob the Yikes unlll ~
25 with 11 seoonds ldt In the
first half on an F,ccles layup.
The same shooter pul the
Tars ahead for the first time,
35-34, with a foul shot. Haven's
jumper made a three-point
spread in the third quarter.
Newport didn't have a com·
fortable cushion until Jeff
Mallnoff's layup made it +t-31
w I t h five minuiea: Jdt Rick
Moaier's bombs from outside
added up to IS points for
Marina.
Fountain Valley was slipping
and sl1dina: at the outset and
never got untracked againlt
Westminster. The Uons had a
2U load In the early gom,
and it wa.s 37·18 at the half.
Two seniors gave Elmer
COmbs' Oilers the points they
needtd on an oft night for the
OU City crew. Jlrn Harrell had
IS and Bob DeBrttton potted ""'°""' ..
1.S. Lee Walters had 11. Jell O
Bowman, an Edlson guard A L bo-~ · t I who played Bee ball at Hun-~41'1 ~wsng ntOYe nw WI proper foot and l1g
Una:ton last seQOn, scored 20 action. The left knM shauld .grodualfy tum to the right
for the Charaen. so that It points behind the ball, • I am demoNtrating
HUNTIM ... ON ••ACM l'tl in the 1JILStratJons. '~ '1 "~ '1~ This slmple act1an will help insure that ycivr
1back .. W11IH11 l'rlddY H1rrtO w ..
C1l1 ,.,,.,.,
MtCerd' Ot8rll'!on C1'1Mn To11h:
1 • 2 2 swing turn k correct, • It 'Ifill h•lp you move the club
•121J I ' ' 2 ' smooth y bock, around Cl\d up, tnste'ad of jerking it
: ~ ~ : abruptly upward:.
: ; ~ 1! If you CIO'lnot lce•p your left foot planted during
1: 2; 1~ .! your bacbwing, at l•t try to kffp y°"r ln1tep on the
1~d•1, June 27, 1969 DAILY '1LDT JQ
County All.Star Contest
May Be Permanent Fixture
On the surface ll would c<rialn'1 •P-
ll>•t lbe Ni>rl!>.SOUth Al\41tr buoball pmo
sponoored by the Klw anb CluJi ol llle Ana·
helm area la here to stay.
Last week 's aecond edition .of the .~c wu a 1ucctS1 1n every way -flGIDclally
(& packed houlo al La Palma SlldJilm) tDd
artlaUcally.
NoUUng quite spun the interest more thin
a t'OUple of upsets. The South hu 11" woo
both camea -via the upset -3-2 and S..S.
The inaertlon of • wild card plnch-hltter
who could ~l for the pitcher without the
pitcher comJng out, wu a strong source of
interest for the rafts.
It wu insanity for the scorekeepers, bow·
......................
ROGER
CARlBON
ever. Promoten ol lhe affair were talking
oI tbe Big A. for future games.
-*--*-*
N..,.n Harbor IUCfl School tennis doml·
u"°9 will appare.aUy 10 on foreve.r. •
Th Tan won die CIF Iarre .cbools cbam~
ploulllp la lH1 aad followed with runner-up
tlallbts tq tlle ClF UUe In '18 and '69. 1
CoaF• Pat Wilson will have six of Ills elgh(
atarsen back neit year. •
Wlltol, lnddta•aUy, led San Marino lUgfr
*t Ute •.mall scbool1 ClF UUe Lbrte limes ...J
In 1M3, 'H and '15.
* * * A quick look-at the summer baskctbalt
league leaves one to conclude I.hat Sunset
League powers Newport Harbor, Marina and
Huntington Beach will, as usual, be tough in
~e winte~ and Estancia 's expected strength
In the Irvme League a ppears solid.
One particular surprise is the tot.al strength
of Mater Dei High School's amb.itious pro-
gram.
The hionarchs are in three su nuner basket,..
ball leai!Jes -the Costa Mesa, Santa NW
and Tustin programs.
And they are winning -lmpresaively In
all. three ~ despile splitting lhe team and
going only 1n the Tustin circu.it with a solid
first -team effort.
Undefeated Woody's
Takes 80-78 Decision
tllown,." Orllloer
l"un~e H1,,.,on
WlllO~ Wrl9hl Tol•lt
101101t CHI 11round. Proper left knee action wlll automoticallycouse
f'IO l'T l'fll TJI : ! ~ ~ the instep to 1tay grounded. c. 0 '"'MAJ\...._'"'"
l A S 10 L-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J,
l e , '
l s l 7 , .. "" ..................... '"'"""" .... "' .. """"""'"'""""'"' 1 0 I 2 ..
1• lt lf '° 1-. .... OINrflln
* * * Anyone feeling sorry for former Estancia
lligb School pilcher Chuck Loseth not miking
the recent AU·lrvlne Le.ague baseball team
can put away Ole handkerchief.
Loseth, who did a remarkable job during
his senior year at Estancia, was unable 10
come up with the proper support from his
mates and ended up with a lackluster U
overall woo-loss mark..
Incl';'ded in victories at the Tustin progran1
are wins over Foolhill and Santiago.
The Monarchs appear to be 011 solid Cool·
ing from top to bottom.
* * * Here's a name that may be In the bead·
lines in years to come from the major lea.
guts. Woody's Wharf upped its
record to 2~ at the expense of
the Douglas A.stras Wednesday
night at Orange Coast College
In the Costa Mesa open sum-
mer basketball league.
Woody's, behind the shooting
of Bob Bedell (29) and Pal
Grant (28), turned the Astros
back, ~78.
The victors grabbed a two-
point margin at the half and it
resulted in the winning 1pread.
John Lyons was high for the
losers with 27 points.
Lucky's, with Tom Read
pacing the attack With 30
point!, turned away Orange
Coast, 82-64.
Bob Black was high for
Coast with 16.
•. M1ncebo K>M -T. Jle.O
l . M1roctbo L111on
<•~ _ ...
Gll~lt G1ttt•,....
Toll~
LUCKT'S (171
occ (64)
l'G ,.T l'I' Tl'
1 1 G 6 s 0 0 \0 • o ~ n
ll ' l 3(1
' l l 13
' 0 ' 2 1 0 ' 1 I 0 2 1
I l l S
Cl 0 ' 0 36 lO 1l ll
fG l'T J'I' Tl' Turlt'I' 515 11 •11ct 1 1 1 16 LIMY I 0 1 I SMllml~tr I S J 1 A111lln J l 7 U
1'hl11oct 1 l I t Tol1l5 1S 11 1$ 6.1
M11"I.,... ..:~r~: Lu~-V'• 3', OCC 31. WOODY'S WHAJlfl Ut )
'"~' l edfll M11t1ll Hllkllln$ ., ..
l'G PT fll' Tl'
I 1 l l
II l 0 '1t
I 0 1 7
1 0 0 ' • 0 4 16
Vike Five
Turns Back
Foe, 62-57
Marina High unl eashed a
second-half atlack to dispose
of Orange High )Yednesday
night in the Orange Summer
Basketball Lea gue, 62-57.
The victory upped the Vik·
ings' record to 4--0 in league
play.
Greg Mulhully led the Vikes
with a 22-poinl outburst with
nine field goals and four free
throws.
Mate Rick Mosier added 19
to the cause as the winners
came back from a 33·29 deficit
at the half.
Lowell High remains the on·
ly other undefeated team
after four starts.
Mot ltr M«luir~ Mulll ully
E••141 ·~ ''" Tol1!1 ... _
o-u~r
Gl11.ow au1111
$1, GN rtt ......
Sdlr.e.r To•1i.
HtN!lrM "·
M.llUNA 0 11 fC# 'T P~ Tl'
' 1 0 19 I l 4 l
' I I 71
' , 0 ~ J 1 0 1
l • l ' ,., .. ,,
OJIAN•I Ull ,G l'T ,.p Tl'
1 ' ' • 6 I l 1l
l 0 l ' • 3 1 1•
l I 0 1
l 0 ' ' I 0 0 1 1S 114 $1
ICIM'I : Or1n11 ll. Mtr!n.t
Gr1"t ll t 1 2t Tol1ll 31 4 t M OOUOLAS ASTll.01 1111 l'O l'T Pl' Tl'
Gl!~r1 1 1 41 LYonl 11 l I 21 'Ll"°"'I' J I 1 14 llr1dlnrl' ' 1 1 a 11111'111 S I J 12
H'"'tl"'Nol l..cfl ll 11 17 I._.. EOl.Mn 10 t 15 1~
Wl:STMINl$Tt'lll {Ml l'Ol'Tl'fllTfll
l'l!l l'Wl'I 1 106
lrudffidc • l 1 '' N"""'°"'M I li lt AW~• Jt,6 Y-r lll l
Mct...,.i.e.n S 1 0 11 Toti!• 71 10 10 U
Los Alamitos
Entries It's hardly the kind of stat that pul.I a boy
on an all-league team.
It's Russ Dillon from Novato lllgb School
In Ute San Francisco area.
Dillon w•s named the All-Bay Area pr~p
baseball player of tbe year by a San Fran·
clsco newspaper.
iJOUNTAUt VALL•Y 1 ... 1 .... S R!!IODE•••""'"'"" ____ ................. .. TPhllt 3' ' 10 71 Hllllirroe IUlrl: WOOlllY'I )1, Do<lllli
However, the Se1tUe Pilots bueball club
was apparently well-versed on Loseth's abil-
ity. His first assignment is at Billings, Moiit.
His ERA In eight ~larln County League
games was D.00 and overall wu 0.0! ln Jl
iames -wlnn1n1 1% or them. "
Baseball
5h1w ·-· '""" 111hter V1lbvon1 Clla"'9!1111 TG!1!1
PO l'T PJI T"
' ' l u l l 2 7
I 7 1 l
1 e o 1 s 1 ' ,,
, • 1 ' Uf ll"' 1-. ff Ot,111rtwt WtttmlMltr t2 n It IJ.-.4<1
FountA!" Vllltv I 10 16 11~ NIWl'OlllT MAllllOJI UI) I'• l'T l'I' Tl' M9 Unllff ' l 0 11 Tthll 21'S HIY ... ••lll
Standings
NATIONAt LEAGUE Et'Clts 4 1 1 ll
•1 .. 11111 ,,,, East Dlyl1lon etc:Jl;tt 1 • 1 1
Won Lolt Pd. GB """' 1 • • t
Ch. -· ' • • • 1cago 46 25 .648 -T11111 '° 11 t s. New York 31 30 .S59 fi lh MAltlNAi ue1
P, Mollltr I I l ,, 1ttsburgh 36 36 .500 101/a Mul1111y 1 1 1 '
St. Louis 34 37 .479 12 L•~ I 0 I ,
Philadelphia 28 39 .411 16 ~1;~i'11111 ~ ~ ; 1~
Z...1ontreal 20 48 .294 241/a M(Gulre ' 1 1 • M1! l l S2 Wesl Divis.Joa T1t111 21 , u '°
Los Angeles 41 28 .594 -s-. "" Chl1rw.
Atlanla 41 29 .586 •.i :~r,:i H•....,,. 1: 1; 1: ~t:
Ciilcinnati 35 30 .538 4 coaoHA Dll M11t 1M1
S. Francisco 37 33 .529 41f1 Ctnn1Y '~ ~ "~ T~
Houston 38 36 • .514 41;, Holltneit• 1 J , s
San Diego 26 49 .347 11 ~:!~~r ! ~ ; ~
Th11rtd.t~1 llltWlh Orllillrf J 6 I 12
ClllU911 7, Pirts.t>urth $, " 11'11),_ ,...,.,. O 1 I I PhU1dek>fli1 2, NIW York I 11'9 1 O ' 2 Mont"""t L SI. loul1 I l"orf 2 I 2 4
Lm. A-Its l. All1nt1 f WlfH I t • 2 S.n Frwic:lsco I, Clncln.,.11 2 Tot1l1 10 u 17 3'
PW l'l'lftY, J-t7, IM,._,,.. 10911t CINI' & l'od. l'lnt .._, 7tfil l'.M.
l'IJIST lllACI. lM Ylrdlt, .INIOllWI I
""'' olds. l'llne llliOO. '" '" '" '" "' '" "' '"
tl'M?lll' Allnlt (Jlllrv l 'llfilln IEllM tMlll'rio)
Melt..,. J~n.t [I C..rdall ) l'r1hY 11.Mlllll !WrltMI
s1 ... Gu1.,,·fl M Cretlt'fl
Brtlk To Win (2 Hlrlf
Otclr l'•Yoff (It ..... ,, lndlln 81scull [$11\CMl l AIM •llfl•lf Moon A11ln (2 ff Cr0tih'I Line ,,.,.r (Mornoo.) "' '" SICOMO llACI:. ~ y1N1. s vt1r
el05 1nd UP 1n Grode A Plul IN'9d In Ctlll. PurH lllOO. l'urw Gr9bbrr (llr1u11\ V!!IYiol lllod Ell CM<.ll.•Ynold1I HOVI lid (I II IJ1nk1I .Y.oOn'I &e•I !LIP111m) O'ArtY IC•y s..ven 1111\11!1 IW•lt1111\ Su" Ghol! (0 B111k>I T1•r Or"" ICld 11.<11lr)
'lClilkklllll ttoct< (l C1f'lloJ.1\ Lvct;y B1r1 Jo ISllPl!l
'" "' '" "' '" '" '" '" "' '" THIJIO JIACI. l!ill v1rd1. t Yttr oldo. CLolmlM. l'lltH $1900. Clltmtn1
l>l'i<:e UOOCI. Hill Stn&rt (APQdlCll PMIUm OKt 151-)
Two Twtfll'I' FIY9 (DrtVe•l
Mf. Allfel W1"91 (VftlMn) Jo k rrn1 (Wlebur9! Clurbl1Co (D 81nk1) Tllrot For All Cl Noorrl')
~..,.. Cl,,_.,. fH1r1I Mr. Sue &Ir (Clr6u:1)
SUIUl'I Lfflllrd /Slnclw!I)
'" '" "' •• '" '" "' '" '" '"
l'll'TM llAC~. :SO Y•rd1· J YNr
ale• pftd 11• Ill Gr9Cle M Mt,..,.1. "llrH His $25,000-plus pact probably won 't be
111 exceeded by more t.ban two other Orange
111 County players.
lltol.
T ritt11 G lftMf °'' ... 1119'1>11 111:1,,.h\ lt9'1>11 TlloHI !WllMIO Clltlnie ,orlhrtt (Ll~m) au• Piiot n w1-1 MtrllM M1""1ret !C•nSlw)
SW'IM Min f5tr1us1I
'"
He KO'd 165 batten in 86 Innin gs. The Al·
Jania Braves have rlgbls &o him.
J oe McCn {Mllwdtl Trurtlln M1n !Sf'l'!lflll Tlllllll 1111,h CO 5''*•1
AtM 11111119
'" '" "' '" '" "' '"
SOCTN llAC•, S!t 'l'•nff, S n•,. oklt •!Id UP In Oroclt AAA Mln111. PU•M tHOO. Hobltrttl CC1rd0!1l 111 l'rosl'IP 81r Olrl (5tr1un) 1U lt1Dtl1 Art1..,.r IAd1lr) llJ
SholdOw Min 111:1nll\ no
E~pellf!t!ou1 (Up,,,mj lU Pen l'•I'• 01ndJ' 111 Ptlllbtlr IPiotel 111 W1r G11t~fe !Wtl1onl \:Pll Pelltll Lu (S.ncMI) JI?
llVEHTflf JIACI . VQMb 5r. coo.irN
-170 Y .. tdl. J -,tlr old' I nd U •. Al•
lowton¢H. PurM n ioo.
Ht~•~ llold CSll P!I ) Blootly Clllr11tr (ApocfKI) ll:U!Nll IL1PhlmJ
Hvf"ry JOl!n {H1r1J
Klltllt Pto (A<lllr)
lfnl MkUy (JI 911\111)
'" '" '" "' '" "' l!'IOMTM llACI:. l50 Y'"''· 2 'l'ffr cl<b. Allo\ll1nc:t1. Troe Leo. Punt -St'll'I A Gatr {LIPll•ml k o111nd Cll'lderi 1c1rclo1•) A Wlr Att1lr [H•rl) '" '" ·~ ,.
Estancia Eck Records 1:4;9,9
Gets Tie At Mesa All-comers
Mike Eck of the Southern Hit~ Jvmp -1. Frc11 cc~1Pf!llnl ,
Callfornla Striders turned in ~~~'' !;~•~m1nJ J. Gille11e cucL..1 1
the belt mark Of the day Long Jump -I Gllltllt {UCLA\ 7 Thursday at the Initial running :c;;~11t1 1c11M> l. No iMrd. 01111nc.;
By DAVE CEARLEY or the AU-Comers Track and Sl'IOI Put -1. E1dle (DCC) 2 ........
Of,,.. Doll'I' 1'1191 Stiff 'F'' Id ,..__ CD<>O Ill' 1hlra. 01111nce: so.1. Estancia gained a share of le meet at \,\.l;lta Mesa High Trl•t• Jum• -1. w11~er lu' 7.
the lead In "• Mesa Summ•r School . w1111e ... , 1u1 J. 111 Rm tv> •nd 11;;,, "' '·k (T.,.Un). Ol1!111Ct: •S.l, Basketball Lea°'"" Thursday """ ran a I :49.9 half mile. 01sc111 -1. 11u1r.1ch rsrrld....al '· ew~ E1dl1 (DCCI l, loul1t IElll Ol1!1nt1:
night by rippina Maler Dei, 71· o... 1n.•. ,. · •• E gJ • 1t Hf.I -1. w1m1m1 fwl 2. 01~1d<i~n Hl'll s..-1 ""• m we a ts &YJ?l· lE•tl ]. J, 01\Wlllf CCMI. Time: 1.7. Mllt 111·111 -1, Ew ln9 CCMI '· Estancia led throuahOut, Miit -I. MIM ISO St•'*l ?. C1rl111> McO""'"n IHB ) J w J°"" tu/. Tllft!~
I•• I ,i..1....i fSenlO" TCI J, 8ul !UCL.Al Timi:: S:•,,I w loll a 23-po nt MWU quarter ''"·'· 10 HH Ulr1I ht10 -'· Pell'MOI {Lft explosion sett~ Jsaue. MU• fMl•ltr•l -1, o wr111 CH8 1 2. w111111111. D•vklM>l'I rE•ll l . J. 01 • .,.., .... Wd IH8J l. No lfllrcl. Time: S~U.t. CCM). 71rM~ I.,, I~ hetU I. s~ Buena Park dee! Costa 100 -ttlrst mo 1. Mtlmlll.lrv 1s~... b1n1 /Hiii 1. MlcLtan et a w111onJ 1. Mesa Its flrst Joas by unutting ll•O"Ol 2. SlllPlt'I' Cwl l . Schmr11 cocc1. Schoetlltt !CML Time: 1.t.
l"w¥ Timt: It.,. ("<111>11 M•I) I. MtT ... e•I Mlle -I. M(OllOW" IHB I ,t,
For Lead
Only 91mtt ld"ledulfd GAll.D•l'f Gll.OVI U11 ToU.,.. 01mn V1n&loom I l , s l'OUlllTM lllACI( .... y1nb. ' Wlr' PllhOurgh (1)!11• 1·1) If Mtw Yotl( Jetv.n 1 • I 1 ~ Incl UP. Clflmlllf, l'urM tllOO.
lt lc1'1 Gold {Apod1c1) Jl ho01'1 l(JQl'U {Wt llOtl}
Tl"V """ (Jllley) '" '" '" '"
the: Mustangs, 54-42. ll'1Clllt:ll 7. y_,. Cl'1dt1c11 ~. Hgre.1m,,...r ,,,.,..,.,. Dt•) J. 0t1n
M led ml
.d ••rou h 011~11• {UCLAJ. Time: IG 1. l(Mf, Tlmt: 1:¥.1. esa way Ul g "o -FrOll fCll.il.Dml") 2. ScJ'le\l!ftG ICIO 111 .. 1 hU°fl 1. A-r INHJ J,
(l(a<»m1n S.lj, nloh! Ml-l 2 2 I Clllmlnt Prlc1 Sl6QCl. Pn!ladeh•hll (Cto.mpjon l ·J) •• Mon-11... I ' , ' G1ll1nt Vlllor (1(1•11} 1!7
Moon ClebDfr IMOO'rl1I J"u1r lllocktl IH Cr114by) the third quarter but SUC· II""" TCJ l. Schmitz COCCI. Tlmo: Fhh INHI J. Edw1rdi (Tu1l. Tl"": ···' '" b D JJ.I. 10.1. lleConO h•1t1 I, Bolon! (FVI ?.
1re1I !Rffiko G.O), nigh t IC.1rr1t1n S 4 2 ll M111 Wf....,um (Apoc11c1l Ill St. LOUii ICtrUon 1·$) 1t C~IQICI Wl!ll1ms 2 ' I ' &l!dv ~tet (H1rl! 170
NINTH llACI. 51t v1rd1. l \'Hf 0101 •nd 1111. All-Inc.ti. Puri.t ""°· Cc.»JUI free uirows y an 170 LH -1, l(~tOY (CM J ?. Sth"l191r !GG! J . 1(11Hf !Ettl. Time: c nf' Id nd Ra dy A f !Cllmllr !OCC) J. CMrtf 1.-.n1helml, 11 ' a Je a n mer o · T1111•: 11.1. iio LH 111.,1 h111i 1. P'•'5C" 1 ~.11 (Hol!1m111 .JO.I) Tot1I• U lS lt 41 S..ee<J A Lee IC1rdo.t1) 117 Ali.Ill• tllrlflon 2.(1) 11 Hou•llln (Le-l<trt "1 Qu1rhlr1 Cue Oedl; IP-) 111 Ten Ml" !Lh>h1 ml 11' Buena Park slarted the m -1. Ee~ (S trldtr11 i. ScMltlftg w111011! 1. R•ed fl8 can~da! 3, Mtlftln
m11!e.. 1·11, n!lthl Gu'dtn Grcwt ' 11 I 13-41 S.hv•r• 901 (Wlhll") ltl L~ Anv""' rsvnon 11.SJ 11 Siii COn.11 dtl M9r ' n ,, >-a l lllf Gtbbtrt tSmllll) 111
Urocll Sh,1flv (P1111!) 117
True Blue Sue (1(1"IJ ) IU li l8rul11 TCI l . Mct10•'' ''''''''''· 1'0 W•••••I T•-•· •> • ,, ___ .. ·~o•• Mu.lang dee ne. " -' "' . ' '"''"" n, Tims: l:tt.t, 1. Edwftrd1 (Tull 2. Re11er CMH! ,], F01"W1rd 811terv 11'
Diegp (NIHro 2·5), lllthl l lSIBllltll ............. .,. ................. "' ... "'•iL. $1n Fr1rochco IMlrld\111 f-1 trod -447 evsz A l 1 Nip!'lllF;W!it.Q Don 11: .. r rc1.,,01a1 111 Sut>er Rcr;1! (Wll1""! Ill
Trnl. ling by eight with four no -1· SchmHr 1occ1 '· ldahl 11e1d1 (E111. Tim•: 11.1. ICh1om1n) :J. Hovi tul. Time: n.s. ,. ' '''''' ,,.., > -··-• 1""1
m'·nules to go, Mesa lrled a • --· • · ""'·" "" UO et1y -I. C~~Pmln (GtUP•, l. Prle't ICM). Time: 51.l
R~rtson l·ll 11 Clll(IM•tl tMllrr lll
1•J Ind ArrlllO 0.0), 1, htlJ..nlthl
S1hwHr'1 011t11t Pllhburgh 11 New York, nlt~I Phlllcklp!ll1 11 Montre11 SI. Loui1 11 Chluto All•"'-11 Hou1t"", nfghl Sin l"r-11<0 11 Clnc1nn1H. nltl\I
Los Anwelll 11 Sin Ditl<I, nlll\I
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Won Lon Pel GB
Baltimore 52 20 .722 -
Bostoo 42 28 .600 '9
Detroit 38 29 .567 Jl 1h.
Washington 35 38 .479 l?Y.a
New York 35 39 .471 II
Clevel and 26 43 .377 24~
Wat Division
Minnesota 39 30 .SSS -
Oakland .S7 29 .561 'h.
Seattle 32 37 .484 7
Chicago 30 37 .448 8
Kansas City 27 42 .391 12
California 23 44 .343 lS
T11ul'M1y'1 Ill••"• &Olla<'! 1, CJtvtlilnd J. 10 h\nln~ Mlnm.11!1 7, C.Hlornll • Otkllnd l, 1(1"1111 Cl!y 1 New YOO'k 6, Dl'!roll t Seil! .. 1, Cnluto 2
()i\\y t1mel Khei!Ultd TIQy'1 GllMI O.lroll {Wlli.on HJ or 81lllmort
[McNt lll' 1 ... ). nithl
Bo.Ion (L111C1l1 J.I l 1t W1Jhlntton CMool'e 4-)1, nloht Nfw Yortl {Burbldo :M) 11 C""~IM (MtDowell t.iJ, ni9fll C'hl, .. oo !Wynne 1.(1) 1 t O&kllnd
(Odom t-l), """' Mlftnffoll (WCIQllhon '")J 11 1(1nMS Clly CDrNO J-71, "1911' Sf,1lllt {P-1tl~ 1-1 -"" M1r11>t!I J-1) 11 C111tvml1 !8rvM'I U incl Wnl!DUrn •n, 2. 1wJ.."l9h' JllllNIJ'I 0.rrta Chie-1t OlkMnd 5e1ttlt 11 Collfornll. n;eM
Ml""""'I 11 l(of\IH CflV rww YO<'lt .. , CltWMnd 8ClllOl'I ot W11lll~at1
Detroit 11 l11tlrnore
Come Of! Oeclc CSlr1u .. 1 "' Dlckff t1r J~ (Smit~' 116 Tl>e Li ll Clll f09 (Wleflurtl 116
full-court press that backfired. Fr91t, 1<11hl, M1lmbur11 > 7. Pie.mu J, 1ao -1. HPr1T..,evtr CMil•r oe11 ·2, DCC. Time: 4'.I. 0.Yiji" [P1cl!lc1! 3, Gr t t n woo d
Race Results 'Y' Mat Star
Captures Title
Successive buckets by 8111 Miit Wl!k -1. Cherrv ICanld•l 1. tLc•r1L Time: 1:111.1. •-h l lh l f kllnlfVtr (OGI 3. T. Oh:w1n1 ICMI, no Cflrsl lle•O -l , Rot1M' INHI 7, .,.,.ut pu e game OU 0 Tim•: 1:51.0. Fllh CNH! J, OWfftl (NH ). T!lftt' n .S'. reach . Ctou COllnh'• -1. C1rlon IS.nk1<' hi!<""" h~~tl l, H1rdl~ {FVl 7. TCI l. Minn 150 Stott) l. l(ane fu). Oltlol1t IPacll!u l l. No !nlrd. Tlme: The shooting and rebounding Time: 111so. :tt.5. of Skip Williams enabled the ll""~~~======~~========; .,,,,, .............................. ..., .• Eagles to hold a lead in the
first hall. with the Monarchs
slipping badly ln the aecond
half. Williams finished with 14
Bl~ Bold Plaid Sultlnp,
Very Tradition.al. TltvNohy, J111t K. Uff CIMr & ,_,
l'IJIST JIACI. «» v1rft. S 'l'tlr 11!dl. Ind UC1 In Grlde II P1u1. Purit 11l00. F11t Sl-r (C1reo11 ) 1'.4111 10.20 7,40 Tiie llt Mill 1L1p111m) 10.20 1.00 Pll'lltr l vt (Wlbonl 10.IO T!mt-M 1/\1,
Ah<! 1t1n-ISlrtomlll, JOt S Ltst, l t• Oondv .... ,_, '°"'' Moollh Ml·
bit, Sltrr• O•v llr, or. ..... 1. su11ct.d-&or ""'"'' Oft" Turn, 8tllt Alltn, l!lrlnt f l1119.
l•CONO llACf. 400 v1...it. J yt1r o1M orod 1111 In Grid!! A Ml"ll" 1'111'11
11111G.
T1r 8111'1' Jllhn (PIM) ,5.00 9.M 6,1(1
llOOMl"I ltt<llllll fl(1nll) t.20 l.lO Cupid In Jltd (LiPlllrflJ (.:10
!1,,..._20 1110.
!M Jltft -,_y C~rtlf, DO·llur. ounOv 1111111, 11.odlln Sir MGflhl, Sun-dlto. ll:o'llHl'I Sen!to, Jlt!I Otck. Scrtt~11111 lled Atrtw. A!e,,...
le Action, Mlrftll MllOn. l"GXY "'-" MY lllV "-'· 00 -"!1'111/IH JN, dl,..u1lilltd a. pllctd 1111.
NIOMTL 't IDOUSLI -.. ,.,, S._Hf'
& J.Tor llllY J .... l'OM '11f.ll.
'tMIJID llACI:. ~ .,...,,,,, Milden 1 fttr Pldf ~ In C1UI, Cl1lmln,, l'Ul'K fl.00, DllrtV llllM ) 11.20 I.Ill •.00 Sle..r1 l tendlt /JI 811'111!1 JO.ill 11.ftl F1mou1 Out1tlo<I (Mlrfl 3.111
Tlmt-11 S/10. Also II.in -Ve...,.,!1 Hlrotr, Lld'I' Clltlr.. 11.o .. do P\ttn.t,, Truly LtX•v,
,,,,_,.._, !)ff, W1tctl !flt l ltdlt, Mr. Srvcodor. ScrotcMd-Mt. M1, tndi1n l lSCuil, Ar1 P10'0Ur, WIM\nt H1111r.
l'OUlllTM II.ACE. l!.o vtrd1. l 'l'tlr o111 '"' 1141. c111m11111. Pune uaoo. M11W; II Mow (1(1~111 2'.111 S.MI ~.6G OH·Lllftlllow llllofltm) ),Ill .1.'11
Go Limb fW1h""I
Go L ill• ht !Adlfrl l lut Zt<o!lyr {$.mlt!I) T!mt-11 2110,
7,00 l,OI) l.00
'·· J.l» ,.
Also 111•.-..ll:lll wn, Loh• Iv•, T1"v Sam, Wlncll A111n, ll1lnv Se1son. Go sntv Go, c1111 ...... 11 Sindt. kr1td'llld-Slltnt km .. Slit Gut rd, Tiny Holl. Otdo l'1'o'Off.
llXTM II.Ace. lMI 11ntl. 2 ,._.,
alOl. Al ....... nc". PUl'lt 11'00.
S!ltfrt LltM Cll a1n•11 3.211 J.00 l.00
11;,,. ~ (LioMm! 2.IO '·'° Mr. Adl'llu1hl CWftlotol 1.olO Tl-11 A/lf.
.\)IO lll111--lorto!l1 L1rl<. lldV ~Im.
In!, Clt<fl l'or M1, SlrlO•lut. Mr. CUP!d.
No 1Cr9tdlel.
11v•111TM ••c•. v-11 Jr c .... rs1 --110 nord•. J 1"11•• 11&1 1nd up. Cltlml,,.. Pvrte '22tlt.
Totllldo lrtete [SmUh) H.00 •.>O 4.60 8111W;MllM (Llol\fm) j,lO J.4.0
Hiii P•P01r l"Cld CHlrtl S.ot
T!~7 2/lt. Alla Jl-lncl..,.1'°r, SN~l1h Lodi.
ti, It"" Sickle, ll:lfte Ill 1tlt Turl, VOY• -· No ac:rotcl\tll.
An Orange Coast YMCA
wrestler has won a national
junior class wrestling champ-
ionship at Worland, Wyo.
1-le's Steve Clark, a 19l·poun·
dcr rrom Garden Grove High
School who won that weight
division wearing the Newport
Beach Y's colors.
Two other local Y entrants
finished se<:ond -C h r ls
Sones of Fountain Valley High,
In the 114-pound class. and
Jeff Jackson. Rolling Hills
High, in the heavyweight di·
vision.
Fish Report
points.
C1•lllti1 , ..
Wlt~l"I Ntvl!Wt 0"'1flfl 0•Yll Willi~ MC"Klnt1y A111tln . ...
1 nc1.iev 0••11111
$WI~ Ar ... r Courtl'MIY C•nlllkl
"'" OOYll
Perlllnl ....
COSTA MISA jtll
"' 'T l'I' TP I I S t
, ' 0 • • 0 1 •
I 1 2 I
I ' ' • 1 0 7 I
I I 1 J
1 0 , ' 0 0 l 0
0 0 1 0
0 0 2 0
O 0 I 0
1• 10 11 ·~ IUlflfA PAllll( (f41 l'O l'T P, T"
I I 2 11 ] • • 10
~ 0 l • • 1 • 1 • s 1 s
7 0 l ' I 0 I 1
O O • I 11 ,, 1'0 1'
COSTA MESA 7 U 11 lo-4 IUl!NA PA ll:I( I 11 11 lJ-J.4 llTANC1A 1111 o1:110!!"u•ltt~llGr!: lj,"'~111!. V:;; .,,::,~~:: -!,~:~~ :,;~ w11111m1 l"O ~T •"')Tl~
'v'-· Mln-;1. H(~~I G<I' ••. ,',."",-",'II!; rO(Vd.t, 1 lln1 (Oii, 1 l'lllllNI. (Att'i ~111,1 : ~ ~ a ""' .. ,..,..m ·"" ·"" Li...-.J-.71 .. ,,.ltn. I Mrrt<Udo, 4l •• trt
Tiffi' 1001 tStr1usll J.l'G '·" bonito, 11• blu . Or1ll1 ' 1 2
,
1
All•M1 Jet !Ad1 lrJ •.llO l(tnffn 1 1 f Tl,,_.11 1/H. IAN CLllMl:PITl-IOol 111tltn1 UI l u!IV I 1 I S Al$0 1t .. n-JoMot11.,. J-. """Mlei.. bou, .00 botlJPo, l bo rr1(ud., J ... llM. SN....,l\tutY I t 1 • Rf"IWll't<I (tolck, Ft~¥ HU• W'!llltle IAN Pll90 CliiWlllC11'11 fll~ Metler l 1 2 ' ntt.11, Oe<il MolH. OQ.Solld Jlocilet. '"'ltrl1 141 y1llewlolt, 111 t 1llct .. .., T1*1\1' o • 1 •
'
111 borrllClldt, llJ bonllo, 2 Otwfin -.,__ 1 t t 2
kr1tdled-O.ndv &•r Dll, LI""'' ,._,.,.IOl'I '' '' '' ''I tun.t. I w11111 1t1 i-u. 11.od<M, GolO L-M11'11. Prluy l ull. MATIJI Oii 011 OQ.-.f'lnl""'° In llNdhtil tor Jre. MUMTll .. TON S•ACK-lJ 111tltn1 •O •T l'I' Tl'
CllllNllNl.i •Ill. UO bo u , 1 llorrl<l.OCh, 11 bon!ft. 11,._, ..... _,_,, I O ' '' 311 -r.nu Ull bonito, IS kl&, J ........., ... ,..
N1NTK llAC•. •«I y1101. J w:1r ll•llbllt, l N rr•cvcl9. Jl°""tl 1 1 2 'I Pldl incl 11• I" Gr• A Pi\11. P11rM OCIANSIOl-17a 1ntlH11 I ll llor· aomk1m~ l 0 t 6 SllOO. r1tv4•• JOI b.111, ti# bonlle, 11 Wftll1 ll:llt'I' ' l I '1
Very colorful, yrt very
trsditiona.l because ot Oenn~gatc's und crstatffi soft
~houldt'r lailortng. Yes, you
can v.·car th is pla id Dacron'•
and \vool suit in town or in
country, !ti; m11 nnrn1 11re
impcccahle. In a host ot
colors to chOOic frorn.
. f Deansgate'
Tanner Duels Tonight
In Mesa Cycle Races
OH.C-O•ndT lllrt1111l JM 2.111
Tl...,._lt 1/lf. AllO J11n-Ptu~ IJr, Cocky l(lfl, C~k:UOll011t, Sunny'1 l t1I, The Churl.
No ICTll<IW'f, OK-°'"""I fr ~Ulfld,
"'"" aAc•. Ut y1r111 . .INlden J
""' ...,., """' tl60CI.
All!ttlllt Do G01C1 U'-1 f.'8 4 .... J.OI -"1 bl11, I "llowl1ll. • r0<t (Od, I ff•n'lll11111 I I ' 2 SOfldy Olk IH CtCllDyJ 1.lll J.:Pll t\lilltlul. Otrm1n I 1 S I Gonle'i JI-I Cl!rt\11.'l ,,llO S•AL llACK-t5 111111tr11 U blr· l(Hnt•mtn I I 2 2
'I n 'I • r.ci.tH, " llOnllO, 561 11111, 11 lllhlllll, 1) lt It )6 -' . '' '' .. ,,_,, AllO lll•n -OlcktY'I Conttc. Sllttll l•rM ... _,.,.., "° borl!IO. ,,. MA, ESTANCIA ' ,, '' ......
Ground, Otlll-, Go Nombrt , NIJ!I. c"::..:""::::":'c":'---------"MA~To"::..:0:'"'---'-'-'---'11 Mllw, IN. Arto, A"lkt ltocllt!. 1• k~ -J11111 Pttlt r mt, LuctoY
Btrt JOI', o.rr..i1, W11Ch Mt Trtvll,
Former U.S. National dirt·
treck motorcycle champion
Sammy Tanner makes his
Orange County racing debut
tonight when he lan-les with a
top-notch field of " o r I d ~
famous speedw1y riders at
Or•n1e County FalrlfOUnds in
Costa Mesa.
Tanner. who has 7 3 2
speedway racing vktories to
hi• credit. and showman John-
ny (Wheelie) Carter are
feetured for the first Ume at
the Fairgrounds, w h e r e
mo t or cyc l e races tre
prettnttd every Frldu nlaht,
be&lnnlna ot a.
fh e two veteran
"broadsllten" will mil with
other such crowd-plea.rs 11
ddending U.S. champ Rick
Woods, Australia's touring
champion Ces Platt, Wild 8111
Cody, Steve But and SOnny
Nutter.
Woods wlll be ••KJng of the
Hill" 1fter dislod&in& Plitt
last wttk in the but-of-three
match race series. Woods beat
out Nulter for lhe ri ght to face
Platt.
Nutter led one lap of the
handicap main ·-lul l'rl-41.J in spite of Riving aw.,. 50
y1rdl to Cod y. the evenbJal
winner. But placed llCODd lo
COdy a.Iler Nutter spun and
uttimate)y Onlsht<I fourth.
Tlcktll wlll bl aold el the
11t.e (whl1" the supply laall).
Gates optD at 7.
COSTA MUA
1'34 lffwPort ...... " ......... .
• c..... .... --"u...... ct!lf •• ,,_ ........ 1<4111
------·-------
llltl11Wieif " ""' NW Mm c.iitP•Jj'f • 18 ,,... • 100~ GHii~ ''"•"' h ll'1tt I
'
norm MEAGERS I J STOtt lS FOlt MI N
FASHION ISLAND/NEWPO RT CENTER
6H-0264
'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'
!(,
dirt) :m ~ ~ ...... .... , -It
)'l&1
IC m
pbic
mosl
IN
the I
that
' E2
liam .....
ttia l u...
Jc tin
"\l
ouro
wt.it
11uesl
lime
re a it
them
\\'iii I
by th
If \\'£
lactic
aspec
i~ arJ
.
'
•·
.,
----
Frni'1. J""' 27, 1969
Baja Calling Transpac
Attracts
Fro11a Saia DlefJ.O
Race to Acapulco Marinas Lure V.S. Boaters
MEXICO CITY (AP ) -The
1'1e.xlcan governmenl is laying
out plans to make more U.S.
boating enthusiasts set their
course for Baja California.
Manuel Garcia Balcatar,
dlr«:tor of maritime works,
announced this week in La
Paz, plans to construct 14
marinas at points along the
Pacific and Gulf coasts of Ba-
ja California.
Garcia Balcazar also said a
call has gone <>ul to talcxican
industrialists and businessmen
for construction of housing
facilities. swimming pools and
golf courses lo rnake the
anchorages still more at-
tractive.
Such facilities, he said,
would not only draw tatcxlcan
vacationers, but would be a
strong attraction for owners of
many yachts and power boats
in Southern California.
He gave no date for starting
or finishing. They would be
located at Ensenada Quintin,
San Bartolome, Abreojas, San
Carlos, San Lucas, San Felipe,
Alfonsianas, Bahia de Los
Angeles, San Francisquito,
({)ncepcion, Puerto Escondido.
La Paz. and Ensenada de
Muertos.
By AL:\tON LOCKABEV
• .. 11 .. 11111•
S e v enty·lhree blue.water
sailing yachts are entered in
the Transpacilic Los Angeles
to Honolulu race starting one
week from today, July 4 ol
noon.
A last·minute hassle over
ratings becau.&e of a new rule
in propeller allowances has
held up the final list of entries,
according to Walter Hoffman,
generaJ chainnan.
1'1offman said !he list could
not be finalized until it was
determined how many yachts
would accept the penalties
relating to propellers i n
aperture.
But it was not expected that
any of the skippers would
abandon their plans for the
race at the last minute.
Sendoff and instruction din-
ner for the Transpac crews
Set for F eh. 1
The Joth :sailing of the blen-15 mjnutes 2nd 49 seconds set
nlal San Diego to Acapulco in 1964 by the late Howard
Internationa l Yacht Race bas Ahmanson 's 83-foot s toop
been announced for fo'eb. I. Sirius II from Newport Beach.
1970. The race will start orf Should co1nmodorc A & h
Polnt Loma and finish at the Bown of SDYC decide to
Boca Chica entrance of enter, he would be an odds-On
Acapulco llarbor, a distance fal(orlle to capture overall
of 1,430 miles. handica p honors. Bown was
The Acapulco race i s handicap winner 1"•ice in the
sponsored jointly by the San race -in 1958 and 1964 -1n
Diego Yacht Club and the Club his Owens cutter Carousel.
de Yates de Acapulco. Co-Peckham said he expected a
chalnnen are Peter M · record number of entries iu
Peckham of SDYC and Aaron the neighborhood of 40 boats.
Saenz Jr., of Acapulco. For further information on
Entry blanks are now the race contact Peckham <11
available through the Sau the San Diego Yacht Club,
Diego Yacht clu b offices at business phone (714) 282..817 1,
2803 Talbot St., San Diego. home phone, 1714) 222·5625.
Rumor has ii that Bob ,==:'.=======~=I Johnson 's new 73--foot ketch ll
early entry. lf true, she'll be
Seal Beach Club Hosts will be held Wednesday at the THE WORD'S OUT -Admiring the newly completed. publicity posters for the
Biltmore Bowl. Los Angeles. 1970 San Diego to Acapulco yacht race are Peter Peckham, ch&irman of the It Is at this meet ing that t f skippers will receive lhe latest even or San Diego Yacht Club, and Ginger Crocker, representative of San
Windward Passage will tie an r l
gu nning to beat the elapsed
time record of 8 days, 9 hours, l J
Ada1ns Cup Eliminations
information 011 weather con· _D_ie_g_o_'s_200_l_h_A_n_n_i_v_e_rs_a_ryc_C_o_m_rru_·_lt_e_e_. _T_h_e_r_a_c_e_wi_· 1_1 _st_a_rt_F_e_b_. _1.:., _1_97_0_. ----
di lions that can be expected The
Orange Coast's
Most Complete
TM Sign of Boetin9 Pleasu••
C&lll '1 l••llHI Volumt-DN!cr
Seal Beach Yacht Club will
ho.st tilt quarter.finals of the
Adams Cup eliminations for
V.S. Names
Admiral Cup
Selections
Four yachts have been nam·
cd to the United States team
that will vie for the 1969
Admiral's Cup in four deep
water races -0rf the English
coast in August.
The yachts chosen by the
North American Yacht Racing
Union for the bi·annual com·
petition are Carina, Richard S.
Nye, owner and U.S. team
captain; Palawan. Thomas J.
Watson Jr .. owner. and Red
Rooster, Richard E. c.arter.
The alternate yach t will be
Homer R. Denius' Rage.
The Admiral 's Cup "'ill be
awarded to the team with the
best overall perfonnances in
the ChaMel Race. Aug . I, The
Britannia CUp Aug. 5, The
New Yori; Yacht Club Cup
Aug. 7, and the Faslnet race ,
Aug. 9.
The competition is held
every o\.her year in con·
junction with the bi·annual
f"astnet race.
Boat Sho'v
Publicity
Man Picked
.James Brezina, outdoor
writer and photographer, has
b e e n appointed director of
publicity and public relations
for International Shows, Inc ..
F .H. (Skip) Creger, president.
announced.
lntemational Shows "·ill
produce the Los Ageles Bo a t
and Sports show in the L o s
Angeles Sports Arena Oct. 10-
19. and the Northern Califor-
nia Boat & Sports Show in the
Oakland Coliseum Nov. 14-23.
Brezina. 50. joins the show
staff after 25 years' experien-
ce as an outdoor feature writ -
er. columnist and photograph-
er with the Los Angeles Her·
aid· Examiner. Western Out-
door Ne"·s and other publica-
tions.
He ha s "'on n u 1n er o u s
awards for photography and
recently was selected as the
outdoor writer or the year by
the California Wildlife Feder·
a.lion for his articles dealing
14•\th the C1lnse rvation of nat ·
ural resources.
As publicity director ror In-
ternational Shows he will prc>-
''ide the press. radio and telc-
\•ision 11·ith lnfonnation about
the t"'o outdoor shows. exhibi-
tors, boats. recreational vehi-
cles and allied products.
Su rf Wins
In Berniuda
HAMILTON. Bermuda (AP )1
-Surf. a ao...root Bermuda l catamaran piloted by Martin
Pollard. was declared the win· 1
ner or Ille transatlantic rnulli ·
hull New York lo Bermuda !
ocean race Thursday. I
The SUrf won on cornctedl
time ,vhen Chimera. skippered
by Robert Hardqulst of Ne1•
York, was still one hour out
v.•hen her detdline ran oul.
the North American women ·s
sailing championship Saturday
and Sunday.
It was erroneously reported
earlier that the quarter-finals
would be held at King Harbor
Yacht Club.
Skippers listed for t h e
quarter-finals are B o n n i e
Bechtol. California Y a ch t
Club : Detiorah Uniack, Hun·
tington Harbour Yacht Club;
Marijac Comer, Pacific
Mariners YC; Shir I e y
McGregor, Seal Beach Yach t
Club ; Em Kafoury, King _
•!arbor Yacht Club; Louise
Fundenberg, Newport Harbor
Yacht Club and Helen Pattillo,
Santa Barbara Yacht Club.
The quarter finals th is year
include sklppers from bo!J'J
Southern Galifomia Yachting
Association and lhe Yacht
Racing Union of Southern
California.
Winner in the quarter finals
will qualify for the semi-finals
where the Area G (California)
repres ent at iv c will be
selected. The Adams Cup
finals will be held in Ft. Worth
Texas. Aug . 28--25.
Three races will be held
Saturday and two on Sunday
off the end or the Long Beach
breakwater. The quarter-final
competition will be in Rhodes·
19 sloops.
Wood Wins
In Lido 14s
Harry Wood of Alamitos
Bay Yacht Club was the Class
A "'inner in Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club 's Lido.14 lnvita-
lional Rega tta, taking hon1e
the Examiner Trophy.
Wood was the winner of the
first Lido Invitational held fi l'e
years ago.
Dick Allen's Paper Tiger
from Balboa Yacht Club v.·as
the winner of the W. D. Schock
Troph y in Class B and Bob
r-.tcCord in Ditto won the Hyde
Braley Memorial Trophy in
the junior division.
Winner of the Berkshire
Trophy for the top skipper
from the Newport Harbor
Fleet No. I was Jim Tyler of
Balboa Yacht Club. Final
results:
CLASS A -( 11 Wood Wind.
Harry \Vood. ABYC: (2) One
For The Road, Jim Tyler.
BVC : (3) All's Well, Peter
Parker, NHYC; (4) Lo1vly
Roman. Rowland Lohman,
BYC; tfl) Ditto, Bill McCord.
BYC.
CLASS B -n l Paper
'figer. Dick Allen, BYC: 121
Long Shot. Pat Dunigan. BVC ;
j3) IV Sail, Arkie Hauck.
ABVC : (41 Fungus. Hank
Humann. BYC: (5) Lorelei,
Robert Hubbs, VYC .
JUNIOR -(I) Ditto. Bob
}.lcCord. SVC; j2) F'renzie,
Curt Wiese. BYC; I 3)
Headitup Honey, Dovell S1nith,
BYC: 14) One For The Hoad.
Carol f\\cCord. BYC; 15l Que
Pasa , Steve Bridge. f\1BYC .
beyond the Channel Islands.
The location of the Pacific
high pressure area -where
little or no wi nds prevail. is of
primary interest.
Early prognostications by
weather experts. however, in-
dicate that winds may be light
over most of the course unless
drastic chan~es occur In the
Pacific weather pattern .
Pt. Fel'min
Race Slated
On July 19
Stay·at-homes from the
Honolulu race looking for a lit-
Ile ocean racing action July 19
might consider Long Beach
Yacht Club's Point Fermin
Race.
The race is open t o
members or recognized yacht
clubs who hold valid Ocean
Racing, Pacific Handicap Ra c-
ing Fleet or Midget Ocean
Racing Fleet ratings. The OR
rating must be 27 feel or over.
Entries must be received by
Long Beach Yacht Club no
later than July 17 al 5 p.m
The course will be from a
starting line one mi I e
northeast of the Long Beach
entrance, leaving the Point
1-~ermin whistle buoy and the
Long Beach entrance buoy lo
port and the cast end of the
Long Beach breakwater to
port. The finish will be
between a committee boat and
the light on the south end or
the West Alamitos Bay jetty.
Distance of the race is 15.6
miles.
Race informati on and entry
blanks can be secured by
writing race committee
chairman, Downie Muir, Long
Beach Yacht Club 6201 Appian
\Vay, Long Beach Cailf. 90803.
66 to Vic
In Halifax
Ocean Race .
t!ALIFAX , N.S. (AP) -Six-
ty·six vessels are entered in :
this yea r's ocean race from l
f\iarblehead, Mass .. to Ha lifax
and the total could equal the
1967 mark of 73. The race
begins July 6.
George Lutz and Sandy
P.tc Leod, co-chairman of this
year's race, told a news con·
ference here Thursday that
the Nina, a 50-foot sc hooner
011·ned by the U.S. Naval
Academy and over·all winner
in 1967, will defend her tille.
Also back will be W. 0 . P.1or-
ro"'s f\1arita Ill , a 37-loot
sloop which was the first
Canadian yacht to cross the
finish line in 1967 with the best
corrected tin1e. '
The Marblehea1t race was
first run in 1905 and again in
1939. ll became a biennial
e\'C'lll in 1947.
Sport· and Import
Car· Show
DOtl 't mlas this display of 1p to tt.e
minute •port can • , the Me& wlttt ol
piacn from Oran9• Co•ty's top tfeolns
. . . fr~• In tt.e olr coHltlotted moll
todoy thru Soturdoy, JHt 28, Hutlntfon
Cffttlff at tflt Soft Ditto frHway,
on ltach at Edlngw.
Ringo, sk:lppertd by Dave 1 G~n, finished first, but lost I
to Surf by almost 10 hours onl
co~lime. '--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·
Passage Eying Honolulu
Bob John.son's Windward Trans·Atlantlc races, Wind· dpre Jack Clark has announc-
Passage, which alternately war.d Passage was standing in cd the top five boats :
sails under the colors or the second place in the WORC Salty Tiger, 3-fHJ points:
Lahaina Yacht Club, Portland championships, behind Salty Windward Passage, 10-4-14;
PRINTING
SERVICE
Phone 642-4321
'i"·''''il"iiii
BUY NOW
PRICE ' INTEREST
INCREASE SCHEDULED
SAVE TO 15°/o
IN STOC!< AT OLD
P'RICES & lATES
70+ 10 CHOOSE f'ROM,
Gl1npar, Stft Riiy, Bl11tW~ttr, l~~ V~••· Wried!. A•on. Otcll Ouav. Gla~!ron, Mt•c11ry, Open 1 Oav~ A
WHk & Evon. U21 S. Mrln 11 W•n•er, Santi An•
714/~ll~
YC and New Yock Yacht Club. Tiger. the overall winner or Lied for th ird are American,,I:;::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=~~==========:
will, among other things, be the Southern California Rae· Eagle, J-21·22 and Touche, g.I.
out to maintain her standing Ing Conference. 13-22, and fifth in Dammit Pat,
in the \Vorld Ocean Racing The St. Petersburg, Fla., 7-19--26.
Championship when she starts Yacht Club is sponsoring the The next five include Olse·
the Honolulu race July 4. three-year competition to de· keta, 17·11-28; Inferno, 13·17·
MEN· Let us nwkc you look your very
best by gett111g one of Sir \Vatter's fa·
mous European Razor CuU.
Before the start of the An-termine the ocean racing sail-30: tie between Kialoa II, 15-
napolis to Newport and the_boa~hampionship. Com'.'.m::<>-_..:l:.9-.,_34:_•::"::d:_B:::l::ue::b::•o:"":::':.:'·:...:.:'8-..:1::8-.:34.::.-"-~=
SIR WALTER'S
2052 Newport Blvd.
EVERY PART WE USE
TIRE
IS
COMPLETE
BRAKE
OVERHAUL
MOST ALL AMERICAN
COMPACT, LIGHT
AND MEDIUM CARS
Coit• Men
NOT JUST A BRAKE RELINE-But We Do All This:
1. Install NEW Bonded • Heavy duty lir.ing
on all 4 wheels!
2. Rebuild cylinders on all 4 wheels!
3. Bleed brokes & replace with heavy.
duty brake fluid!
MAG
WHEELS
:;s;aooo SUPER SPORT
• MIRROR·POLISH CHROME
• CAST ALUMINUM CENTER e THEFT·PROOF HUI CAP
$35!~
4. Turn and True all 4 brake drums!
5. Repack Front Wheel Bearings!
6. Adjust Brakes and check Emergency
Unkage!
7. Road Test your Automobile!
FREE BEACH TUBES
to Adults
CAR
CARE
Store Hours:
Hours: 7:30
to 6:00 Daily
Don Swedlund
'PHONE
646-5033
S40·S710
• •
Ro•e Fust
Eagle Seoul Ken Shep-
hard, Troop 189, has
achie v ed Scouting's
highest honor at 14,
\11ith badge besto\ved in
Court of llonor at M~sa
Verde Methodi s t
Church. The Esta ncia
1-ligh School sophon1ore
Jives at 18.55 Pitcairn
Drive, Costa Mesa.
• 11 Honored
At Ensign
Eleven students at Ensign
lntenuediate Schoo l, Newport
Beach, have received specla1
rt!<Ogniliqn.
They <ire : Liz Heiser and
Clark Pot.hoff, A m e r l can
Legion awards for outstanding
girl and boy in lhe 8th grade;
Jay Lovig, art trophy; Liz
Sweeney and Hunt Dabney,
Outstanding vocal m u s I c
trophies.
Other recipients include :
Kathryn Kovalenko a n d
Hobert Conn, outstanding in-
strumental music trophies:
King Humann, Ensign sailing
club award; Brian Cokas, out·
standing boys aUtlete trophy
Mary Hamel, outstand ing girls
athlete trophy and Jo Cribe ,
outstanding student council
award.
4FromCoast
OU Grads
Four Orange Coast residents
are among 2,501 graduates of
the University or Oregon.
They are :
From Costa Mesa ; Sydney J.
Olson, and Gary L. Schutz,
both givee bachelor of science
degrees.
From Newport Beach; Linda
D. Closson, bache lor o f
science. and Carl W. Noecker,
bachelor or bu si n ess ad-
ministration.
Yule Stamp Painted
By Unknown Artis t
One and a half million
Christmas design p o s t a g e
stamps will be printed for 1969
is!uet according to Postmaster
Gen. Winton M. Blount.
"The slAm p ls a reproduc-
tion of a winter scene of
bygone days by an unknown
primitive artist," Blount said
today, "The painting is lhe
property of Ute New York
Historical Society, p a I nt e d
around 1810."
This will be the third stamp
to l'Ome off the Huck press.
Only five of the available nine
colors wlll be used.
" Christmas" in old English
will be printed on a vertical
panel of the stamp and on the
apposite side will be "United
States 6c" in sans serif.
The selvage ol each stamp
will contain a plate number
and indicia, "Use Zip Code" in
brown and "?i.1all E a rly," in
red.
Girl's College
Going Coed
ST. CHARLES, Mo. (UPI)
-Lindenwood College, the
oldest women's college west of
the Mississippi, will include a
men's coUege next September.
About 50 male students will be
enrolled in the re s ident
fres hman class.
Llndenwood presenUy has
600 women students. College
officials look ror a growth to
800 men and 800 women
students during the next
decade.
DAILY 10·1 0 -SUN. 10·7 COSTA MESA STORE ONLY!
'
SEE A THRILLING EXHIBITION OF
CONTROL-LINE FLYING ••• INCLUDING
HIGH AND LOW SPEED FLYING ••• PLANE
TO PLANE COMB AT ••• PARACHUTE DROPS
AND MANY SUR PRISES • EXCITING
MODEL AIRPLANE
EX HI BITION FUN FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY!
This sh ow will include precision f1yin 9 by ex·
perts including adults and youngsters. This will
show you how simple it is fo en joy your own
mo de l flying .
FREE! GLIDUS TO
THI KIDS FREE!
SA TURDA Y, JUNE 28 2 P.M. AND
3:30 P.M.
TEST OR
• \. ·-
The Famous T estor Mini-Air Show will Oemonstrate the Tester line of model
airplanes. A Tester's representative will be available for answering qu estio ns,
and will give individual instruction in starting mod el airplane engines .
, ....... ,,,,, .. ,,,,., ............................ ,,,, .. ,,.,,,,,, ..................... ....
• • i WIN A FREE AIRPLANE i
• Bring Th is Coupon to the Mini-Air Show end Deposit In 6oxf • • • :. A FREE Testor MocMI Alrpl•ne will be •w•rdtd to the winner of a drawing ;
to be held at th• conclusion of ••eh show. i
: Print Name ............................... , . , ..... , ......... , , . . . . . . . . . . . . i i Winner Must Be PrHont to Wini f
~****'*********'*****'******'''**''**'*''*''*'***''*'**'******'****·
PLUS SPECIAL PRICES ON
Mom and Dad
Bring The
Kids To
This Great
Air Show!
TESTOR MODEL AIRPLANES
YOUR CHOICE
7 Models to
Ch oose From
....
14.91
$988
COMl'l.ITI
Willi
ACCISSORY • KIT
A T THE K·MART PARKING LOT
22 Hon o1· Students 11'·1-
11'.Jmii ClllTlll'IU.1'1 011' ~·-Cl111'111'tCATS ~ •Uf fljQt ll'tcT!'TIOVJ \
f'tCTITIQUt ti!Arli'• " nit ~ -~ ,_ .. -'Tfl9 Ullllinl9Md clo c•t1fy -...., lf't dl,o('ll!ll I ~ tt l.n•H lllYtt.ifit
Top Ma1·ina· G1·ads ~tlfw I D\lofnn' 11 J)O;$ .,...,.,.,. Orlw, M......-i ISffdl, C.~. ~ llMI .• ,.._, a.tell, C1llflw""'-. Ufldtr Ir. !1cthi... ftt'lll -.t CH MIWl'OltT
,,_. lktltlwl firm -of HAllt -,.EST WllAfl 6 MAIL. •••vice. 121 "" ~ ltlll NICI tlttn ll ~ " 1111 =~TINO W 1Nt NICI llrrl\ It ~ hll ..... ...,_.. wricM. ~ Ill Ml ., th9 ~ --..,_..
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l1111. Hllll!Moelo!I kldi. CellfW!lle. Htttld .t. Orn, OM ~ w .... , -069 d I la s~ ll'iKf'Wllt, S.IW 11111,..., DOHAL.0 f , SMINICO, l lMl ViUl'-' t<I ........... ci't. C1Mflrlllt. 111e I gra ual ng c SS or Ellltbt1h "•lklV. Merlorlt "•rrlll. L1111. H11t1l""''°" lllCJI. Ct lltonlll. O•IH Jut19 lt, , ....
M In HI h •-hooJ · H 0111'11 JuM 1. Ifft Herolcl 1. o. .. Y . ar a & ,;>!,.: In UD· Jotr 1'1•11111. $11U11 ,...,1,......, hr,,. Mtn> e. Ullllke _ 1t1tt o1 ca11tON111, o....._ Ctuf!W1 _
ll-ogton Beach was topped •y Pt te"' •o11er1• ll'tttn. Tltm' "11'"' OciMkl e. $lllnko °" J""' ,,, JHf, lltfor• 1Mo • ,..,.,,.,
u TlmolllY Pettrlolfl, Jofln "''''""'· M1rt. Stet. ef ClollfGn>I• l'ubllc "' •1111 "' .... *"'•· '""9Mll\f 22 honor students. Per...-. a1r111r1 Pe!llt, Gll'Y "'""· Or•n1t c eu111;: ._,_. Herold z. Orey kfltWl'I ,. -• Tb ho d I 011vld Ptvnft', Cynl!lll Pflr111t1t. P1lll °" Jllflt; t 1,...,.,...,,. ,... 1 ~'"' 1111 !Pit llttOrl WtloM -II t\ltllN:l'I~ e nor gra ua es are Pflil«, P1u1 r~IDbt. •-1c1 l'NIU11t. PuttH< In 1ii.i 1w ""' 11111,· ..tr-1i.. hi lt!t w11111,. 1na1rumtt11 l!M l<llMW..,..
Bryant Averyt, C h e r y I \/!di.I• Pl••tl'· P"'" "1'*"'°"· JoM •-••.-:t M.v1' e. shll'lt '•llll '*"'"' e. " "' •~ecultd "" -· B d J I 'DA-:_ .I. Pins, J-Potlel'. L.•w""tl' Porn1tto, Slllnlf.1 lulOWll to '"" '°' lie 1111 ""'-(OFl'ICIA.L $EALI enar , 8CQUe yn f,,>cuu1g1.011, Tlmol!ly ll'ol\1lnl, Ceil"'" "-"'• wtlOM nlll'll$ l l't 1tlbKr!Md lo 1111 ""1111. Mt"" K. Hlfll'V
Patricia Bonham, Patrlcl:a P1trlcl• Polftn. 0~11• Pritt, °""'' h, 11111nMM111 i nd Kk,_litdltec1 !MY ••· Ncir.rv Pu1tlk-C1lltor11l1
C Pr1tte, Mery Qulbodlttu•-KUIM ll'lt, """· ' PrlnclPtl Ottlct In Bonnar, Brian Burford, ralg J1m11 111be. c1ndld• 1111nn, Suun \OFFICIA.l suu i °''"'' County
C I J Ck C ·r J R•m"'' Cllo\IClll R1y, J1mn ll1yrMl'ICI Or'""" Iii, Utt My C-l11lon E11plrr1 8 tOS, a &l 11.!1 f ' ' 11, Freclrlcll; Re(11pldo, OllM llN , Notary P\llllk<t llforillt No'f. 24, lt'2 Robert Childs. Mel1,.11 Afdd, Mlc-1 lllMCI, JOlln Prlncl,_, Offklt Jft P~blllhld Oran" C-1 OtllY l'llot. Also, Steve Cowen. Coiro! Rttvn, 11°" 11119111 .... Me" 11.1 .... 1,, Or•1111" COlirlf'I' J"'n' 2t, n 1nd Jul't •. 11, lNI' 1111"'
..lofln Remy, Fr1mP011 111 ... 1,......., A•wtrn "'" CIWIU'llli1lon ~"*' LEGAL NOTICE Dietz, Pamela Grusz.ka, Ann Anon Jr •• RDl"f t1t rc111m , OoNttltY Mllreh 21, 1n2 "-·ba h r-I l!li 8 ba A.lcnmond. Ool!l'8 llllt Y. Miki II'*'"• PU1t1!1111d Or•nt• CMlf Diiiy 11'1~ 11'4*7
n41· c '..,..o es, ar ra !.utlll RO.ctl, 01ana tlta.bblftl. MlcMI Jllnt .. IJ, 20. 27. '"' 16'M9 CIEITlll lCAT• °" au11N•••
Larsen , Chr~pher Leland, Roberee, MOnll Robltholl Jr •• s.nv 11 tcT1T1ou1 NAMS
I M 11 R N ) Robert..,,,, L-n Roltlnoon, H1rr'f LEGAL NOTICE Tiie llncllflltnM -C«111Y ht 11 c-V ncent 0 , Og er e son, Roclt11ue1. Ranald 11.0!lltn. SUiin d!Kll"9 1 buslneH 11 117 Miiii $1,. H""" Dale Neuls, Claudia Orliski, R°"". Liwr...ica Ro1o11, C•lhlrlN n11tton a11c11, C•t1tor~11. uncttt" "" tlo--
Raot, Mtrlol llOMM!,1, Giner llO'*llfllll, 11'4Ull t~ llrm llllM o1 THIE' ESQUlltl! 11111 Christine Pick(ord and Judith Glr11er Rowt1nd, Allon llucld, T1v1Dr Cl llTll'ICAT• 011' I USINl.$1 111e1 Mid fln'll 11 ~ .. Ille "911ow-Pr Rudd. PICTITIOUI MAMe lr11 Hnon, """"'' M rM '" 1\111 lflll .i.e. esson. L.l..O. "'"°" an.oc• 1tuny4rd, w11111m TM ....... ,.. .. "" c1o certlf'Y ll'll'f ••• ot rnldlnce 11 11 1o11ow1: Others Who graduated : 11.Ufdl, llO!ll'tr S.Cllolr, Pl\ll St.Int. $u1.ln conclucllllf t kill-11 ltl E, 11111 S.mwl J. GGCIOf. 1n•S PKltl( C111f
Oololll!H A~. Lorr1lne Ahlt"f!I, S.t.!r, °""'I• s.m. G-.t $tm1rd!cn Strftl, Coll• MeN. Cellfllrni., ....O.r "" Hlth••Y· S!lru.tl 81Kh. Ct 111. ,.,.,, ~ ..... AA:Yel, Cllrillllll Allllntll. JOhlO 11. llttllc:u StncMi . J1nlcl Sln!M. 11ctllklu\ 11mo nam1 of llARRV'S Ml111,.. ... cldrn. l".O. aa '°'' lllnMr Ald rll:IH, K•ltlY AllMllll. MltlUI ~ s. ... nci.-,, Mktle1I smw1r1:. S ... NOWICH SttOP -tllll Miii !Inn Is 811(11, Cllfl. f(IU7.
'
•· --, .. •-... •-~ 11.tblllk•h Sfblotl. ,.....,I• S.llr. •rue• ~ ot lhl tollcn••lr11 Pl-. Wl>OH 01ttd Jllfll u, lfft. A ,. .. , ,_, ''"'"• ..... llllr.& """"'""'' Slvmour, Ktrln Slltlftr. Kirk ~11111>. nlrM• In lull end plten ot raleltTlcl ••t s.t.mw1 J. Goode ICenMth ...-r-. Suitnnl All<ltrton, J l"kt! Stuw. Mier.at! 511H•n, l rvn II k>llowl: Slate ef C1ll1Wl'llt , Or_. COWl!r : :-..::..i~l-, Gt ry Anll'lorw, Pi °"!i. Slltkten, Ji nelll Sllli r, J•anlu Slllf>r. NORMl.N G, SLATTEll, t 13 ' 0.. J11111 11, 1fft, befott "''· 1 NOii ,.,
Mlrry Armenia, Ktrlft A.rm!ll ft, 51.., .. ¥ Shlnpo, Vktor11 Shlpg, Ptlrkl1 GllMawi. TtrrtU, CO.te Mn.. Publk In Ind for Mhl St1t1, ".._!IY
T"""" .. Armour, Debor_,, Arm•lr_, Sllul!, LU.CV Sltkkr, WUU1m 51turd>OOI. Cllllwnll, 1_.r'ecl S.rnutl J. GCIOdll know!! 19 me Miry ..,.,.,.,...,,.,, Oerrfll ~' n d 1 • Slli<ln S!lvt , ll'lomll SJmo111dr., Jotu• MAV 8 . SL.ATTER, 11>6 Glln,tq les to be 1"9 pef'IOfl wl'loM nemt II 11191crJtt-
SlmP!IOll, P•ltl ~Ion. Terr.a, Cotll MIM, C1 llfrDn1lt. "' hi fM wi thin ll\l$rvmtflf .i111 Mirr "'rmJlf'QC>SI, OiN'!! , "d I. • ...... r. Sladl11. Jtlt•tV $~. 011111 ,..,.... 26, Ifft Kl<MWllcllloll lie UKUted Ille Mmt. 81rblr1 Arnold, Ool'llkl Arthur, R°"'n '"""" MIV I Sl1ltlr AK/ltr, Otlllll ... ,Ion. Clltrvl Avtrv. W!ltlarn Slelltrv. Judy Slt r. All'lton H • G •• , !OFFICIAL SEAL) Smlltl Oi nlt l Smllh. Kenntrd &T>llh, O!'I'"" · tr Mirr IC. Henry Rick AvMa. C'tnlhll B1~1r, S.muel ''• ',m_. Anll• Smo111'! ltollforl Sl•le ot Ctlltornl•• NPllr'f Public -Celltornle 81H1n<:t , ECIWtrCI 8abtrl lit. " """• ' ll Ort11tt Collflty • p I ' I otrl 1 S.lvllol't lirlt!erl, su1,., ll•rd•ll, $n111. 8trktlev Snow UI, Ju t On M '' i .. t ......... Nolan r II( Pl Cl n Soft '°" ScoH SOttnlOll c • I h ' ,, • ' """"' mt. • O••llgf co ..... ,., l vnn 811'9t•on, Edll!I 8••kleY. llot1ald So</~ ~nd 1 bl SA•k'K Jo Alln Public In t M tor "Id $t11t. \Je•50fllll'f Mv Ce>mmlU.lon f)QllrH
81•nn. lllck 8trrl••· s111•0<1 B1rrlt1, ' J • 1 '' •• 5 1 "' ' Lou•nn ._...., Nerm.n G. Slt lkr •llCI M&y 8. Nov 2• 1m
Mtrk11$! l••tler. Gery 8t1m,.n, 0 1vtd ~:'ro,, ~:8~'::i ~l~g:t~ Otlll't $1ttt•r kMWn l'I> me II) bl Ille "n o11t Pllbllil\td'Or~nt• COii! Oill'f ll'llol,
B1um111. Oavld l!'Ck, MlfY Beck, Gell ~,:=.· Oonn~ $!. Cl•lr.' Pilt!c!i wM11, IWI,_ t r. 1ubterlllecl 1o 1h1 w,~'!'-J11n1 20, 21 •nd Jul'f ~. 11. Ifft 111MJ
8KklunCI. P1lty 8H , O.C,nelo 8ttWn ,• •--• •• .., Sli r.h Oonnt In n1lrumtnl •r.cl IWO'Wlldted ,,., LEGAL NOTICE Jr., Lynne Be111ev, R09er Bt khtt, !1< ....... '' '" orP ·' 1•ecutld 11>1 11m1 Rumll l ellanv Jr., Ol1n1 Btncktr!, S!erkey, Wltllem s:~ln, 0' b r 1 {OFFICIAL SEALI.
Chrlsll111 Bender. Vldllt et'll~lt, S!<11htnw11, Sli11n S'u~tl, Brl•n f leenor f , ACOl!I 11'4J1K
Oomlnout Brn•lrnon. CArot 8~n11n, Sltvfnl. t hrl1 Slevtnson. f""'"" Nol1ry Puti11c..Cilllornl1 CEllTl,lCAT• (Ill' 8UllN•ff John llllol>l. Anllt lll1rm1n, 8tvU lY Srewarl, 1'~th"ll'lt Stewett. Otbotl h P1lnclPll OUlct In fllCTITIOUI "AM•
81.,.1eaa. Ptule 8IU1. Jll<lv 11re1w1H, Slln•on. Chrbtoll!wr 5tockt111!, Oren~t Counl'Y Tiit unci.rnltMCI cir> cit111'f "'"' i re
h'tM 8lrmlr11!1am. Jtftyt 8 1t dutrd, Chrl1ll'lfllltr S-. 81rltllr1 S!rt !lord, Mv Conu .. l01lon E~11irts COlldudl11t 1 ll\lllnet.a 11 fOtt Adi"" .......
JDM l ltckb!Jrn. G•rY Stromlunll. L.tnd• SUl!lvtn. Mav 11, ltXI HuntlMton aucn. C1Hlor1111. undtt' !hi
Sllllcloll 81.cll.m&n, Jt"'" 8 1•1M. Wlllltm Summtrtltkl, Cllll'I Sumrow. Pvbll11'1td Orl llff COii! Otltv Piiot tlcllllau1 fln'll "'"" ot AOAMI A.VE.
w 111i.m loctw>~n. Jeilrtv 10111, llntr· r~rll• s .. 1111t, Lfn61 '""'· C>tnltll• Jun. '-ll. :ID, n. !Nt I011Mt OOHUT$ •nd !!lat Mid firm 11 CClll'll'Olld
lw IBclnnev. $hlrllY k:"MV. J1,1l!t Dor.fl, SltM rt. RKllC<I snrtt:i. Cituill T1• of "" lollCIWlllf MflMI. whoN "'"'" 1 ..
Rlcnird a orlend. Oivhl llotld!, Oolotts 9 •rt ~ttv111 T•ot'11. Pt ul T1udli1, LEGAL ''OTJCE lull 11">11 Piiati of rtslclenu ••• ti aoublon, R1vmond 8ou91'11r. 0•" lloYO, rrrt~ T'vlnr, O•wld T1y1Dr. P1trkl1 •"' fo!lowi :
IC1Vlfl ICl'flr, P1trlcl1 llra<IY. (I ntl T•v!or, 01t:Gr1ll Tebbll1. Gery T~ Wlllfr J. Jecctbs end Luclllt M.
8 t1Utr, Cllrli a r1Wtr. Wflfth 8r1llV1, !>i'•h, J1nlce Ttel, Vtltrlol Tt!· ... unt JICOW, 21m lre!M L.tna. Hllflllntton
a1,,,.r1 l roolct r. ll"'er!Y fl roalr1, lor<1. E0•1rd Tt rr1!t\. 519vtn •Alt·1'7S lltKlt, C.lltornll .
l(evln 8rct...,. Wllll•rn 8rown, ~ndr1 1'horn. E~trd Tiie.mis Cherin C•llTl,ICATI! 011' •ullN•SS JIH'le 1, 1"9.
flrownl1111, Pitrlck BrubKt, Or11nl1 Trom~1or., Su"'" Tllonllloon. K1re11 ll'ICTITIOUS ll'l•M NAME Wt119r J. JICObl
l ruc:t , RttCI 8uc:kllv, JDM Buc:ll.111, Tl'lc:.,.set11. Teti n.urrn, Jt>y't Tlr/1. Thi unC1«1!1ned dot! lltrrtlv Ctrllh Lucllll M. Jecobl J
Otnnl1 811111, Mlcllatl l utll, II°' I WH Wltll1m TlnofrV. $\l>ltMI To!@tl. 1111! lie ll ~ll!ll 1 <NI nl•le S1f te cf C.ll!or11l1, Ort ... t C-l'lr:
Jr., John I Ul!ln&r. Gr1nt Tuckrr, Oebor•h Tlll'll1, dl'ltlolwntflt ""1.lneQ 11 111 ll'ldtv;d\Ult 11 On J11n1, 3. 1"9, .....,,.. me, • Mlltery Donni a ulllrd, Shelli B11l1lr11, (h8rlo'• TurMr, P1trkl1 T11mer, llU Mee ll•• Ortv1, $ou!ll $hoorQ. Pulllk In Ind for Mid S111t, ,.,_Ill'
p1,...11 lur~l1tr. Slle1"011 Burrl!'W'. Mid'lellt Twlnchfk. Trllllll Uotl'ltfrovt, C1Ulor11l1, IN'llHr !hi llct111ou1 llrm nemt •PM•rtd Wl ltlf J. Jemtll. Ind llldlle M. Vicki 81111, S!,111n 8utctwr, Thorn•• 01v!<I \11nd••llndt, llollltl V I n al CONTINENTAL. STATES OE\IELCP· Jt~ kl'ICIWft I'll 1111 .. lie ttie ,.,..,....
Buller, 0.rllty •ut11I, Edwtrd 8Yrlll. l(rtt!tfl, Ct l!llHll \111,11~11, Anll!onv MENT COMl'ANY Ind th.ti Mld firm II Wlll>M 111rnee l rt wl!Krlbecl I'll Ille wtfhlll Elliilttlll arr111, Annt Cltllll. Jolin \lenr1mloll1. Erle \11m111rl'l't, A1k t ~..i err ltll lollowlf>e per....,. wt.ow lftllrlltMflt 11111 ..:t.now..._, tMy Ill
Ct lbo, P!Aly C11bo, CJ\llrlH Ct llow1v Vllll,,etl. JOhn \lofkmln. A.""rtw hunt 1n hill Ind l llCt of rHICltnte II 11 rcvltd Ille sarN. Ji""" c.tmobtlt. N111ey Cemcibttl, \lorOllO, Rh0nd1 \lowell, Htvrl \lur,un, lollo'#I. to.wll: (OFFICIAL SEAL)
CYnlllll Cr~...,u. Joi\" C1rctou . Wllllam G11le Walls. Mlcl11I Wtlcl'lk. M.lrk Clltrlt1 S. Htwllln1. 21ll M1c RJI! Je1n L. J otnl C•r11on Cl'lt'l&tophor Ct rt!tr, Ric.herd Well, Robt<'! Wtllac,. w 11111m Wi iii«, Drlv!, Sou!ll Sl'IOr11, C1Hfor11ie. No11.., Publk-C1llfor'ltll
C1•IHl0, Fr1~k C1ublt. Joe Chan, Vldr'f l rr111 W1lllM , M1r5'!1 W•'l~n. lloberl 01!1'!1 J1me 10, lftt. Prl.,.;lp1I Ol'llce In Cllfnllll, Clltd Chrl1~h~r, Jlmff WlllC>n J• .. Kev!n Wt'°'I!, KAll!ltfn Cll1rlft S. Htwkln1 Orlfltt COunlY
Cieri!. Ll,;1 Clen., G11Y Cl1rk• W1rne, 8 ruce W1rntr. LtAnn W•rrett. Slit.TE OF CALtFOIHHA l Mv Comrnl11lon Ex•lr"
Olllortll CllM. Pa1r!tlt Wirrrn, Jore• Wtlkln1, Ttrrv COUNTY OF ORANGE l ~· M1 rC11 2. lfn Loll Clor, p1~t Clo\ld, GI.., Coffev Welttt On Junt 10, lfft, be-late IT'f, 1 Not1rv Publl'111d Or111111 C011t DIFl'f 1111111!,
llCIYCI Coll , PIYI C1111!11, Mlt!\l!le J1~t1 W•blllr, Wflld'f Weber, PuOllc In I ncl tor Il k! County ~nd Sltlt. Ju ... f , 11, ~ 27, 1Ht 101.,..,
Collhi., G!Orr1 Collln.-111.. IClrn Com· Rlch.l•d W~l•r. Ellzebetll w111r.1, P1r10n1llt •PPt1trld Cll1rle1 s. H1wkl111 LEG AL NOTICE
mon1, Crl1ty COl!ts. Thorn•• Connor1, Mldl1el WN1, ltwrtnee Wn!On, known lei '"" IQ be 1111 11er1011 "'"°"I ---'===;:.,;;;;.:.:::::_ __ 1(1rar Codi. Kathnn ca-. Lind• Shlrlt, Wl!ttlock, coc1y w111i., l lndl n1rne Is llllltcrlbeel to lltt Within In-"·U7lJ
Creclll, M1r1C Crrn 1. Ctrl Crlttll'ldtn Wiii!!!, Benv Wii t.rd. IClll'f WUt!lfl'l'I, itr.......,nl, Ind ldlnowl~ I'll m. Ille! C•llTlfllCATS 01' IUllN•IS II. \lt Mt Crow1ll, Grttarv Cr1111I, ll:lcll. WIUltmlOll. Seal! Wlt!l119h1m. ht l •ICllltd Hit Wmf, l'ICTITIOUS "AM•
Lindi Cudll!IY. 01111 .. CulfllM. l(evlfl Cline Wlttlt1. Ell<!tn Wlt1011, ICtvln (S~~~ju my hi nd and "'''· Tiit Ulldtri1'9flid C1G ctrtltv !hey i re
C..,1Y, llrucl C11mm!no1, ElllM C-Wllclltlr, MltllHI Wllllcll, Ctrtn WOtl, Ellllt S .... ... Ct'nel\ldl119 I llu,1111'11 11 1'111 E<tw1rd1 m!1191. lllwlll• Cutf'lltlll, S 11 • t n Oenlse Wol~. K1r1111 Wo1 ..... llft, Otvld · ..,..,..,, Sf_, Wt1!mln11tr, C.llfor11l1, Uftdtr 11>1
0.Ptna. 1Ctn<1tl~ Da~l<1ul1!, lll lph Wood. P1rn Wood. JOltn WOOdhoute 11, NO!ery Pulll!c-C1!1tarn!1 tk 1lllOUI !!NII flltM of LIEAllM A.HO 01~1d1011. Mira 01~11, PP91t'f 01vl1. J ud!lll Wrl11hl, ICtltllftn Wrlt M. Tr1cl Pr!.,.;l•tl Oflltl Ill PLA.Y ,RESCHOOL 11111 !ht! Mid firm la
G1tn" Otw", John 01w1on. G1rr Wr!ghl. Wlllll rll Wrltlll Ill, Clllrlll Orenge County <omPCIWd of lhl hlllowlr11 .. ,_., --.
Della. L1ur1 DeNucclo, Otboreh. wun""'"· Scott Yount. Wltll•rn v°"""', ~ c:"',':J:•lllfl E11plrtl 11111111 111 11111 tnd 111<a ef r•ideftQ , ..
Ol\let. KlllllrlM Vur ... k1. lertrer1 l UP1<1elc. HA•MON •. ....... I I flt llow" c-lt O•VOI, JICklOll ()M!C>n, Milk • Oor!11d ShllClon SlulMn Ind Viv .....
Dewlll"'' Oori8lcl Oltlt. J1mt1 Otllon. LEGAL NOTICE A.n~ •1 Llw P1ulln1 S1u1son, 6'Q Cork 0.-1,.., H.,,.. Rlcn1rd onion. P•I Oillll'OW. Jd'tfl ... Nlf'fll Mtlll SI., llfltl'oft Seidl, C1lltcrnl1.
00htr1¥. K1llll OonlkllOll. Ell lne ''"'' Af'I, C1Mlenll• n 1'1 Oiled Mtv lt. Ifft.
0ouoi.u. Gltf1n ao.s.. O!br1 Or1kt l"·Dl5' Tel: M1·1UJ Oontlcl Sl'lllelofl S.ullon Mlrt1n Or1kl, Ctl!ll..., Offt<llll•, Jori •All·lm J l"ll!>ll111tc1 Or-· c ...... , Oalt~ Pilot, VIVllM P, S.uhllfl
Otnr. LC1Ur1 O~r!t, P II 'f 11 11 Cl!JITIPICATI OI' I USI NS$S 11111 11 Ind Jul't ~. 11. II. 1Mt 111._.J Slit! of CtOtornlt , Or1r111 Covnl'f:
Oudlworllt, Sarti Oultne•. 8•111 Ounn. '!CTITIOUS l'lllM N.t.MS 0.. J\1111 5, 1"9, lttlw1 !I'll, I Nole,.,
S....fl Ouv111, Slntn Et rlt, Roller! n.e undt f'!l1gned don 1!«111¥ ctrtlf'I' LEGAL NOTICE P1,1bl1c In •nd lw Mid Slllt, Mr.Mii¥
FdtlloNon, Lluf'ftll Edw1tCIS. SIHtl_, 11111 tw Ii Conclucllnlt • Tl llvltlon S.IQ I PM1rlCI Oonikl Shlldort S.ullon -Vlo
l!llf"Y ,Chrt1U111 ElllDll, Sl9Ptltfl E"lol'I, u>CI $et'vlct llcii l-(II en llldlVICl~O t! vttne P1ull ... Sl11lson known lo ft'll lo bl C~!llr E ... 1!1~. 0 11111 EPMnon, John 11511 fl Toro ROid. El Toro, C1llfornl1, L.l!OAL. NOTIC E 11\t ""°"' WlloM ntmtt lrt lutltcrllltC
•"''-· -.. 11 ... 11 .... _ n---SAO. Nl!Wl"OllT-NllSA. UNIFIED to 1111 wlthlfl lftltrllfTllllt end id.notrtlfft--· " """" "" "' SCHOOL OllTR ICT tel 1!11Y nlKl/fld Hie MltW Ctrolt Eurt 1. V11«1t E1ltlcH. OLEllACK DISCOUNT TELEVlllON Ind Nllk1 1111rlt1111 lkli fOFFICl ... L $EAL.I ' Wllll1rn F11c011t•, M1 llsM Ft1Hrm1~. SAOOLIE8A.CIC \IALL.EY Tl!ll!VISION NOTIC E IS HEllE8V Cl\IE"1 lhll t~• J l Jotnt
P ..... t. F in~, Tlrf'I' Flood, Bott FluH. ANO ... PPLIANCE5 •nd llt1t Mid l!rrn 11 9o;ard al Educ:•llOll of lhl Nt ""POr1·Mell Nt~n 'Pub!k< lfor'ltl
Lindt F-1. Chrl1!1 Fonl,,,.ro.f, CVfl!PllltCI ol Ille IOllO'#lnt fftt.OI\, whcn.e Unllled ScJ'loOI Dl1!rk l DI OrlN f COYntv p:1.:C~1 Olllc'I ~~ 1
Cll'11l'Dl>ller Fr1tn11. P11111 Frere.. nllllf In 11,111 11111 Pll CI ol rnldtnu 11 II C•morfl lt . Wiii rtcelvt ltlled ltld• "° ,; Ore~ Countv
OtYld Frlckt. La•,., Fl"Ot..v, Merlin follows, lo--wll : <• 11 00 AM. on th• 7th air OT J ulv, 1'69 i t Mv Commlstlon EllPltll
Frollcl>, l 1rM' Ffv, C~.o-1 F1111Ut VINCENT A. L.it.VEllTU. 2lm Hit cfflcl cf Mid 5Cl"tool 0 11!rlC1, IDcllf<I lo\trdt 2, nn
Rollnt'I' Fulmlr. Aobtr1 Funk Jr., Bth 1'onr Rel., El Taro, C1ll10r11lt 11 1U 1 PllCtrltle Awnue, c,,_11 Mt.a, P1,1ltllll>td Ortnot Cotlt Oaily l'llol,
Furbish. Btlltt Fvlp1~. Otn11!1 G•"'IO Ot!ld JUM to. 1'ff C1llloml1, ., which time ll ld Okll will °' JUnl 6. 13. 20. 21, Ifft 101 .. ,.. l l'll Gelnt'f, Gtf'I' G1rd1rl1n, Ernetl \ll11e1nt A.. l•~••lv Pllbllctv OC>f!lltlll 8nd rttd for:
Cl1rrl111n. Mlc httl G1rrll0f>, Cvnlh!• STATE OF CALIFORN IA I II. Ml!MORY MOOUL.ES LEGAL NOTICE G1rv1r, Su•111 G1n m1nn, Oew1l11 COUNTY 01" ORANCE I ANO
G111<1ott, E•fll ll G•u1h1n, Candlct Gt°" 0~ Ju'll 10th, 196', lttl<>rt '""' I Nll!lry llEMOTE COlo\PUTEll TERMINAL$ NOTltl! 01" SULIC TtltANSll'all
Clr11u. P1,1bll' In •nd for u ld C011n1Y •nd sr11e. All blC11 ''' la 111 In eccwd•M• wlfh {Slc1 lltl-41'7 u .c .c .1
JI/Cit Gt 119ler, Cralt Gtah~rl, Ptmtla Ptr\CINlllY 'PP ••'• d Vlnctnt A. Condll!ont, ln1lruttlr111 11111 SOIClflct llo"' •-No, "'.JH Grtlrl, ~~nine om, JO!tn GI!!, 51....,en Uovor1u kllOWn lo rM to lit 1"9 .,.,...,n whltn 1rt net• 0~ flit In "'e ofllc• of the Mollee It lltlrll)y 1IV1r1 II) 1111 Credi..,,
Cl!lllind, Olvld Ghml n, Lindi Gllml't', WhOM fllml 11 IUbserlbed to lhfl wlltlln Purd't11l111 Aoftlt of U ICI $Cl'lool Ol11rfct cl JAMES D. HASICE LL Ind MA THILOE
Carol Gl~19ow, Lindi Glover. CtW!I lnelrullll~I. Ind IC~ncrMleCl1tecl lo 11\1 11111 llSI P IKlnll• J A.....,llf, Ct1!t MeM J. HASICELL, Tr1ntfl'!'On, ""hou llcillllltl Golo..,, Anrllonv Gom11, JOhn Gorn•!• hi nteu~d the 1am1. Ctlllllf'llll. . ecldrn1 11 Wn lclUf Vl!ll No. It, '"-'
Ll rr'f Goon, Howl'll Gtl d'f, J.,.omr Wl!~IH Ill~ ll~nd tnd 1111, Eich ltfdd1r ""Ull 1ultml! 1 bid dtPlllll 81K1t. County cf Ortr1... St.ti f1f
Gra11st. B•rb•r• G•1vr1ln. K1r.., Grtf (OFFICIA.L SE.All ln tht lorm of • c1tllrled or athllr't C1tlfornl1, thM I 1111111 tr1111ttr 11 t lla\tl 19 t<tl!~ (lrevdon, F'r1n~lln Grttr1. ICf!f'rv C~arlei. R, Wldl'l't cn~ll; or • ltld llol'ld ea111I 10 llw perctnt be 11\bde to E L.rr~v Krottcft, Trt~il«ft, Grttrte. ltllY Grtltllr. K1fhry11 Grltt Not1ry P110llc-C1tllornl1 IS,.) ol 11'11 •mount of tf'lto llld, ,...111 whnc! 1t111lneu a<!Clrnt 11 Jiil Nltelelrl
11111 GU1rrtro, Mer,., G"'lvtr, J•IT•n Prlnclp1I Olfk e In ••••hit ta IM oratr flt !hi Nt"""°"•Mofu AvlltlUe, C111t1 Mui, County ., Or•,.. Hui, Slto>hln HICl1i nd. P 1 b Io Ortllllt County Unlllld Scl'loo1 Olltrkl. A Ptr!armtnc• 51111 ol Ctlllorn11.
1'1ltlll!lt•, Oouola1 Helt. Glori H•llY My CommlHIOll IE•Plrn Ot<:. lt, 8ond r " be '""lrtd ti !ht CllKAtlon of Thi ~to be tr1n1f1u·td It llM:l"'41
O•lt Hiii, """°" H1rnbY. l'11 n. o ;· .ct. In !ht .,.,., cf f1lklr1 i •I 301 ~'I"' Av111111, lllbot 11~ Olb:rrlll Him!llafl, ltrblri Ht""'1 Publllhtd Cr11'11t Cot1t Dtll'f Piiot. 111111' Into 1UCfl COll!rKI, lilt proceeds c County of Or1.,.., Sltll ot C•lllotnle
Cittii.... Hi n.en, Jlnl H 1 11 l l "'. .klM 1J, 20. 27 tnd J~IV '• 1Hf ll2Mt the dllCk wlll Ill lortt (llCI, er In UW .i 1 S1ld orGHrtv IJ dncrlbeel In ,.,......
l"etrlcl• Hu1t~. vo:nh:t H1n1011, M•'c bond, lilt ,...H w m ltllr.o! will llt 11: AH Jtoc:k I" lrtdf, ll•,...tu , ttllfp.
Ht•POlt. 01-H1rr1., J11..,IM H1r LEGAL NOTICE lor!1!tec1 10 Mid Sdlaol Ol1trld of Or11111• rn.i11, ''"" ntme. Ind l'oocl ... 111 rt fllltt r'1, lltblcce H1rrltt, S\llln Hl w Counl'f. Pht rrneey llu1ln1u known 11 11-.:..
Cfltryt 14 ..... Clt uclle Hivlll, Gr.ct No blddet lnl'f Wltl'ICl r-hit llld for I VUlltf Ph1rm1tv I M loc.tllCI ti J02
H•YllH, Krlsl1ne Hellh'. L1ur1 H~bP!, •All·lm Pr•ktd ot lorty.f!V• C4J) d1y1 lflfr Ille Ml•llll Avenue. 81111cot l1lencl, C111111ty ..
llabtrt H91...,....t !\o Slndrt Ht!llll NOTICE TO Cll•OITOllt 11111 Ml tor 1111 -nl ... llltrlof. Or1n91, St1t1 DI Ct Ulornlt.
GrtllOtv litllalld, ...wrr1n HembV SlJl'ElllOI COUllT 011' TK• Thi 801rCI ot IE'cklCl!lon ef Ille NIWDOrJ. Thi bulk !rtmt.r wl H be ClllMMllNl!ld
C•l'Oorl' Ktf>rv. Ji""" Htrbolcl. Rollfrt STATE 011' CAL.t,CllNIA. 1'011. """" Unified School Ol11tlcl rne"'" !hi Oii tr 11111' 11'11 Tltt div ef J\tl'f, Ifft. •t
M4f'll, Wtll\i m ttnHll. Cirol Ht.,. TH• COUNTY 01' CllANO• rlt l'lt I'll rlllrct ll'IY or I ll bkla. I nd Ml a.Ille of Anllfkl HT6SA. IDl6 l"'IM
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....... No. A-421'1 necnMrlly "''"'' !hi lownl blCI, end to Avtr111t, Nt-1 8Mdl, CMll'f "' t !<1boll'llm, Pt1rlclt Hit!. tcvffl .....,...,n '''''' o• CEILA M. FLY NN. o~tll!d, Wt l'll '"' lnfannt ll!Y Of: lrr111ul1rlty lfl Or1119t, $1111 ol Ct lllornlt. Anion Ho11rn111, G•,., "'3tlm1n, W1rrffl ..... 1nv blCI 11'111 Htltmin, Tllarnts Ho!llr, Cllfford Hori. NOTICE. 15 HEREI V GIVEN lo IM O rllft • So fir n k11C1Wn lo Ille Tr_,.,., ell l11t1_.111• crtclltan QI th• 1bow nemtcl d~t •ltd J-1t, lftt. ltutln111 n1mn •nd 1d<lreun "* by
s u ... n Holm, JOlnM Holmt n. Otn15"' l!lol t U Ptrlolln1 n1vl119 cl1lm1 10111111 llltl NEWPOllT-ME$A UH IF!EO Tr1111f1ron 1111' IM thrtt Ytln ll'lt "''·
Holmn , Mltl'llel Hol!nti . 0~11ora11 111d dKtCltnl '" recwl•ed lo lilt 111rm. ~HOOlc2,lSTRICT o1 JI dlllf•f"I from tht 111ovt, i re: 111m1.
HOlllker. Hincv HO""lt ll, ltrblrl •JO wlltl !I'll neceuory voucheri, In llltl ollkt ""'' llty. Ct llfornl1 OttllCI: Ju11t ,,, 0".
Hl!lCtnt, ltoblrtl HuH, Tom Hvt~H of lht c~rk cl !he tbov• en!lllecl c.outl, c1 =Y '/:°rolhY Htf'l'PY J1rnn 0 , H11k1ll • Trt,.ftntt
ICtrol Hvmrntl, l vn" Hu!chllolln, JHi IO 11r11tnl !hem, with IM lllCllllM' •• ~rc,,!'1"' All'l'll MtthlloH J, H1t11;1[1 • Trentleror
voucneri, to In• v~dtriltneCI 11 "" Llw -"" £. l 1•0Y IC'at•dl. Tr1r11'1t rH lnflt!1, Oowll• Irwin, Ct•Tfr Ivie. CUlce1 ot ROBE RT OAL.E HEllON, Ill , l"ubll1Md Orlnle Cot:il 01Uv l"llol Publl"'" Ort11tt COii! Ot tlY Pl.,,t. O~nlel Jt nk!!WU!, K•rtn J1rv!J. John aarrlngtO<I Well!;, P. 0. 80ll "6Cl. LOI ~UM 2CI I nd 27, Ifft Ill•·'' Junt ,,, !NJ U21-4t
Jav. T1rr1nc1 Jer>~ln1. Kelht..M JI,.. "'"-----;-;;;;;:;;c-7.;:::;::;=:-----'-'7-,,.,.-,-~~-c=-C::C:: nln~1. l rut t Jahnloll~. Cerl Jol>nlOll 111 A<lof le!r. Cllllor11!1 '°°""' wh1cll I• ~I LEGAL
Cnrlt John"°"• Jvtllnt JohnJOn. $&)r!J~ place ot llu•lnen of l~t imcler1l1n1C1 In ~II NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
M
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1111!1«• 11er11lnl11t to lh• ••!tit of 111ld., __________ ~~-~--------------J01tn..,,,, Sulin J01tn1on. ''''rt dtaelfnt, wllhln lo~r rnan!h1 1!ltr lhtl Jot1t1, Rot!trl Jonn, Cenlel !Caler, first Pulll!ci !lcn of 11111 l!Olltt . STAT• 0' CAL.lflOllNIA.
P1trlc-Kellt'f. CillCI Mn 1', Ifft NOTICl TO CONTllACTOIS
IC•r<!n 1(1/rer, N1ncy Kallhtr. llld! Ml r9artl Ann f l~"" Motri SEALED PRO~ALS Wiil be rtctl~cid ltv lh1 Ofllc1 11F A.rchlllClvrt 1r.a CMo
lC1mre!h, 0 o u I I I • K1,,..;ru11w1kl, ... dml,.f•lrllrl• :.:.',.uo;flort, lloom tlOl. 107 SOulfl Broeclwav, lo• Al\gtl••· Cllllornl1, 11nU1 2·00 a.m ,
StfPMn K1rteld, R1vmone1 K•rlcv!d'> ,,.11t1.Th .. WIU·Anne•ed n...01y, Julr 1', lfdt, •1 Wl'rlch llrnt thty will bt pUltllcly OP1f1111 •nd rlld
Jamn Kt YIKh, M•rv K•trn. Oolort$ I tn. E I r of "' ~ amid In lloom 1101 .. Mid -rflf '°'. Kr1rntv, A11n1Ut K....,t , Terri K11r. :tCIClrnr' 11 1 1 11 INITA.Ll VENTILATION. SYSTEM IN WAROS O, E ANO p:
TntrlM 1'1t,,lfttltr. Wllnt rn IC lmlMll, 11:0 81!1¥ DALI' HERON, EM. OEl'AllTMENT OF MENTAi. !1VGl£NE
Robtr! Klrklllrn. Ch1rlt1 Kncw111 ft, Allon1er •I l.aw l"A.lllVIEW STA.TE HOSPITAL Ktll~ ICno•, P1rnt l1 IC""'1, Cvnltlft Jll l errtni 111n Wilk ' COSTA. MEJA, ORA.NOE COUNTY, CAlll'CRHIA IW.0 .AEOJ 077 C,
!Con lon, JaM KcrvKJ, Jolln ICl/lln1, "· o. II• 4,.a " •ccordttnce Wlltl 11'11 Pt.I'll •nd 1peclllattt-1twr1for, •nd 1uct1 lcldtnd• lhtr•
Altllt ICur!J, llut11U Klffh Jr ....... ""''""' Ctllflrnll Mlt ID It ml1 br luullll lll'IDr la bkl DPtn"'9 dlt.,
Ctor'118MI L.Qen. Wllll1rn l.Wtr. JOhll Tel: UUI 41H1W TM blcldtr'1 t lllntlln la dlrtct.CI lo • ,,.,.,lalon In the Prapoul bV ~ktl ,...
L1rnbrrl, L.'fl'lll L.1P1I"' G•Yle U rson. Atte!'MY ,.... A'ml~hlt"•h1• fl.lelder certll._ l'lllllW lo ~lnlno 1ub-bkldlff' quotttlcl'll 111~ bid ~l'°'llt.
Mtrti; lt•-· ltrf'I' L1wrenc1, P111! Wfll>-TMoWUJ.A-•M 111 IJtntl'tl, 11111 PfOied compr!1n Ill """' If by 21 It. "" l'OClmJ COfTIPlt!t with
LtWTMCI, FICIYCI l e'#IOn, lloblr1 le'll· Publlsh!!CI Ore""t Co11I 0t1W l'llDI, ~le.II eqiul"'*" to provlCll mlllllpie 1C1111 l9mjlerecl t lr ¥trtlllllloll wllft
"'Eii ine l..,.hen, l t w•rn« L«lll J11:11 U. 2t. 11 1nd Jul~ I, "'' ll?Wf ;;'.;I,..'!~ dlllrlbllllor! W Uhl \111 ·~-IO H rvlct th"' * H, ... ,..,..
091'r Le111'11, J.IMI LIVI•-· MIC111t l LEGAL l 'OTICE Collll!Vdlor! ltM:kldlt 1twl !riming, 11111 Incl pl111tr, melll f!,lrtlng ...o d...,....11.
L.ewl1, Suu nne Ltiwl1, Lindt Lrrv•, ~ 1111111......, ntollno, •ltclrkll "'°"· · or1dl"t' -PIVll\g, o11n11nv. 11111 -.rllllltw JOI Llndbel1, L1ur1 l !..,.,.,ul1!. Tllomn lrr9tllofl 1nttm.
LlnleY. ll<lnllcl L.'-kll, Oll M L.oc:kt CfrllTlll'ICAT• Cl' CClll"OllATICN Bidden fl'f)' IH Ille plan1 fnd IP1"Clllc1!Pollt 11 !f>t 1ret Bull<leri' EJidllnlol
Dtnnts l oc:k1111n. M!Chlt1 l cttl!n FOil TllANSACTIOH 01' I USIN •11 Oll!Ut, tnd tllt Ottk:t of Archlttclurt lnCI COlll!tllCllon, !1211 N Straw!, $tcr1mtni.
ICl!hlf'tn L_, 0...1111 l -llcfwt, UNll•ll frlCTITIOUI NAM• lflll 1'7 Solrltl llf'OldMy, LOI Anollff,
Ce!l'ltfllle "-'• 01¥1d l..Olltr, '!'HE UNOER S!GNEO CORPOllA.TIOM Blldtrl C•n otltel!I pllm Ind IPICl!lcltlorn, Pn:tllOll l form!, end lidcM<'t !Id
K•r.., Lord, Wlll!am Lorl'I!:. Cevlcl •• h«tltv elW'lllY !ht! 1111 conduc:llM • "'torm Ir rtQV•Ulno ltltm Ill -1111111 lP.O. 80• 10.lt. S1cr1meni.. c.111. t~J, .,
L.CIHMr .l!l'f'h111lt LOVI, IC1r111 L.,.., ltnt111r1"t t rod r'>C-1111 IHlr b!J11!Mit __, from tllt Ol'f'Jcl of Ardllttciur1 1nCI (llfl1lr1,1c:llon In 5M:r11Mnl0,
Mlch11I lirnd, IC1rm l lmdM, ltt"e ioetll'CI 11 ?DJ E11! COlll HlthWllv, ,r ... t nCI 1pecll1Cft!Jlni IN)' be otlltklld wllhOlrt cllt '9'1 •nd •rt NII ta Ill ,... l von, lorr~lne LY1!1, RIHllkl MtQtd, Co•Cl!I dtl Mir, C1!110ml1 11!1C11r lhfl !IC< IUl'Md,
11'011 MIMI, S.llv Mtrllafl. Jon"H"' IJl!oui firm llltlil of CHA.llllEI BISTRO No ltld wl!t Ill CO<'llkl .... 11t1lel• Ir '' f!lldt 1111 1 '""'°"'I !Orm tvn11111td ltV "'-
1'1 !Arthur, and 111•1 n1CI tlrrn 11 comoowd of Ille Offkl of A.rCllJltchlrl •nd CO<\lt•u<tlon. t ncl i. mtd• In •tcordtntt wl!ll 1ne "I"" ICt rtn l'i\CC11t1¥, 0...nll MtCrt!ohl. IOUOW!nt conior~llofl, W11rnt prlncl111f lh'11Cllon1 to l klcl«.'" EICl'I Oldclt t muot " llctl!Md Ind t !M ptlqVllHlld Whtn , .. 11.i..n Mcoannctd. John MeEllloall, pl1tt of M inns 11 11 follOwt: qt;lrtd, •
t"rtnk MclMl1, Jeme1 McKtnnf, K1r11 G j, H RESTAURANTS, INC., 2n5 Thi OIPerlmftll of °'"9!'11 $trvlctt rntrvn lht rlDhl lo rtlM:t i nv or 111
M<lllrtn. l"tlrlck McM1lron. Cllrlttlne E:•tl Cotll Hl9llw1v, Coron• dtl Mir, llkl1 t lld Ill Wf l¥1 '"'I' lrr11Vl1rltr In e"y Did rtcetYld.
NICll tvnold1. Juntt McRtVl!Oldl. J~ Ce!llor1111. 81d1 Wiii Ill 111tart1tnld ..,I)' on 1 tvrnp 111m 11t111
Nl•cWIUlt. Cerdan MldlHn, Ant ,WIT NESS ii. lltnd 11111 24th Clt 'f ti June. OI NIUL ~ll lVAILINO NOUllL Y WAGI lllTll
N11ff111. Shtll1 M11hkt, Elto.rt Mil! 1"9. C:OUNTY 01' OllANGE
OoM1 Mlrlftl, 01"!11 Merk, J""" G ' M llESTA.URAHTS. INC. T'ht Oftlilrlffllnl of Otolle!'1I Jtn.ltn 1'111 l lC&rl•llitd 1~e g"'erll Jlf'tvllllf\[I r1:1 M1rllfl, Von Ml rll, ••rt:oer1 M1wwt!~ Gtortf C. H1ln•ld1, Pr111dtfll ol wt ... for 1lrllvhl tlll'lt, OYertlm., Sl h,,cll'(f, SU<'dt\'I. tlld IMMl4tl'I. lll(ludlllf
Vidor•• MIYberno. Clifton Mttll91' Mtrv Htldtll, Vic. l"rnldenl '"",..,.,. pl)'mtl'llt !or htlllll •!Id llff!llrt , Vtcl liOfl. Pl!lllon. ll'td l lfllll.lr ~
Butrlr MllO••· G«f'I' MIMI. Jtllf'I K011,t1nllrte I". Gtortl• oo.a.. 19 11t """If'"' l\tt"Hlllff' !or 11'1 county lfl which ''" ...nr; i. 11 t. !fww. fNl'l!llt, Mlfllrlll Met'1ndl, Oc-n'l'I Stcr111n>·Tr111..,rtf' Holldtn lllllH be tllott tltllftlel 11 1udl In "'' tolltc!lv• bt~llllnt ttr""*" Mttrlm1n, J~lln1 MCIUl!ltr. ~lcl'tffl STAT! OF CAL!FCllNIA I •PPllcl!Nt to lhl lellor ci...!fk•tltn(1I 1rnoto)'ld .. Ille 1ubf1t.t. ,.._lklelllo V1Yl1n Nllldwlltr, J..,., Mllft, (OUHTV OF L.OS ANGl!'ll!S 11 l lrl llflt htt""1 .....,.
Oevhl Mltlrr, Mir-Mlllef', tl'ttf'CWI ON JHIS 2.ltf! di~ ef J11111, A.O •• 1'f't, CU.lllll'ICATIO(ll TIPflt °"""""' ...... ,
MUI«, Mld'ltll M!HINn, O etr r 1 brfot'I ""• Merit C1wY1r, e Ncfery Cl"*'IW .......................... o.& 11.D II.JP 11,U
Mltc:Mll. Plli>nc 111 11111 '°' Miii -"' ..w •1111. c""""' '11'111Mr ............... s.ti 1.4'1 11,N 11.16 l!'rnftl .Motfl. 'rtf'I MOnthen, 11-n rt1l•tl,.,. llttr•t~. dlilY OOMtnlpltlwd Ind l llelrlcltn ....................... 7.011 n.• U.111 ''-* ""'°"""-Jelldfl ~. 0 r t CI ._,,, lrlf1'll'\lll'f •-1'911 Of« .. C. Olt1ltr ,. ............. ., .,. , "'" 6,0& t.109 1.l'Ot 11_,,, ,,...,.,., ICl11\' "'-"ii Mnt.I ,,...,.., HtWdl, M.I,., Hllclftt end ICOM!ol!lllM I", ltocl Ctn'\ff • "1111111" .......... S,IOS 11.ltf 11,.ftf tt.M
Mlcfllt l MOOl't , llt..ee Moot, J..,,... °"'" ltl'llW"I Ill nw Ill lie lht l'rlllclent. 11'9n""'« • lltlflfortlft9 ...... •.'5S l:t.OJJ U,O;st U.W
MO'""' Wl!Ht rn """""' Jr,. LI,.,., YICI prnleltnl 11111 _,..t11'Mt .. 111r" 9' l~1t • llnll(tirttt ........ 7.•S U.JlJ U,JlJ IJ.)IJ ""°"'*'• J.,..... M\.ft, J"'lllllt M11tlltr, lhl COl'll'Of•llOll 'llttl llllalltd !ht .itt-111 LllOrw ., .................... .A.1'1 •.1' 6.n 1.1J,I
Fr111«1 .Mt.!11111.,, l'tlflCe M4.o!U111, cm lftltNl'Ml'lt Ofl llllh~" ef "" CO!'-lllOfl .... """"' Ot~ ............ '-•S '·" '·" I.ff.I M11rJol!y, MM.-M~en. MlcflMI N#'t, 1111'9111 nelMll. t nd ~ tt 1Nt """*" ............................... 11,16 11.N 11.16
T""""n Nffll. l'tlrk ll N11rlflt. Jl\el Wdt CGfPOrtllOl'I b'1t11lld tl'ICI' Mme. ll'llnfor ......................... •.J7S t,0'2 t .1'2 f,l l't
Clllrln Nel .. , Abblt NetJOll. OIVld IM WITNESI WHlilllOfl, l I'll"' "111!1rer .......... , " ........ ,,11J 11.'7 11.t7 11.27 JHe-, 0-Htl-.n, Jenlnt Ht"°"-hlrtvflle NI my llt nd .nd tlfl•M "" Of. l"llrmOlr &. SIPlm Fltltr .,,, •• I.Mt U.OM 1'.PN 1'.CN
....,,trill NIVbllllr. Or.rill Nwrllllftfl, rklll 1411 "" dl'f 11111 .,.., Ill 1111• llOllW °"''..,. ............... '·"' t.IOJ •1u 11.7• •rue."""""•· L.wr111 N-11. lhtrtw cer'lll1c1t. flf'lll 1tov1 wrltlen. lloollt ........................ t.11 1.ti t.tJ 11.Jt ,.._.-.., Otllnl N-""' lltolllitl (Ol'l'l(IAI. $EA.LI lflMt Mttll won,.,. ............ 6.n to.II 1e.11 ll t1
N!WIT!lflo (llr!1llln Nletffn, IMl1d M•tll C......,tt lrK!or Op«ettr ,,,, ••. ,, , . '·" 9.Jf '·" II.II Nltlt111, TttTY f<ll•on Riii Ntonto\, Ttr NO!lf'I' Publ'c;.CllltO!'ftll 0...rn-True-Drl--Vllllt r • cu.
rytl O't0flfl411, Mlcllttl O'FerreUi Prtnc'MI O!!lt1 I~ l'O• weter lff. u~°' ., , ., .. 1.1111 1,1p 6.ltS
Nltrll'fll O'•,lln, l"tNlr OllOll. Annt Los Antthit Cownty Olll'AllTMl!NT 01' OENl llA.L Sl~VICl!S
o .... 1n. ll11111td Olbornt· Nort h M1 (omn.lu/on IK''"" Ol'l'ICI 01" ARCHITECTUlll! ANO CONITllUU.IOH
OIDorM, ~ O!lal11111, t\1•'1 11 HtoY. ft Ifft l'll EO HVMM IEL. A.I.A.
OWnlrttl; (hlfyl ~ .... Ml'•klfl.'""'' fllltt!lll'ltd ortMt C01tt 0.11'1 ll'llol, I TATE it.llCMITI CT
lt.d
11.lf
II,#
IJ .• .... ,.,.., ......
11.tll '"" UM ....
l!)f
11.17 , ..•
ll)f "·" 12.n
12.IJ
10.lf
lltlllollfWI '"'~"· l li'1'$11 ••HI" ilwiwt1 Junt ,,, Ind J111Y .. 11, II. lNt lnl-tf l"11Dllslled Ortf!OI ('e.11 DlllY l"Hot, J-at. "· July 1, n . 1•it Ptrn'r PllTll~ rartUI. JOM '•rttn.1-~---'-~~'-'-~"--l --~~-'-~~.;..;~~~~~~~~-----~~-'"""
lio
"" :t l<I
OU
"' qu
tir
re
th
\\'j
b)
If
ta
" is
:z OAll Y'"PltOT fnd,y, J"" 27, 1"6t
••
Will Take
Land Gift
MANHEIM, Pa. (AP) -An
81>-year-0ld Amish r a r m e r
wanls to give away 12 acres of
land if somebody will build an
orphanage on it, But so far he
has no takers.
"I don't want any money out
or this or any praise," says
Noah Greiner of :Manheim.
Lancaster County. "I just
want to help somebody, tha t's
all.''
Three years ago Grenier
thought the site-high on a hlll
valley-wO<Jld be ideal for an
llld folk 's hotne, "but the pec>-
ple look anolher area that had
buildings on it,"
That's the problem with
Greiner's gHt. I t 's un·
developed land and any takers
,~·ould race the cost or con·
strucling facilities.
11is wife, Annie, backs him
solidly in his ques t to do
"something goocf' to "help
somebody.''
"We're getting nn in years
and figure we don't have much
time left." suy the Greiner!S
who have five children, 10
grandchildren and a great.
grandchild. ··we just 'vant to
do something good while we
lilill can."
Greiner says he has always
had an interest in homeless
children, recalls that in 1918
they took in an eight-year-<1ld
girl whose mother had died.
"We ht1d been married for a
couple of years and had one
baby boy," he recalls. "\Ve
thought all children should
have a home. so "'e went to
the Lancaster Orphanage to
pick out a girl. She ·s marril:!d
now and a.grandmother
herself."
Griener's farm covers 100
acres an<f he sUll rises with
the roosters and helps milk
the cows.
llughes lfolel
Gh·cn Okay
LAS VEGAS. Nev. t AP)
A federal judge has cleared
the way for lloward Hughes to
open on July I his sixth Las
Vegas Strip hotel, a 29-story
needle-like tower called the
Landmark.
The hotel had stood ''acant
for eight years bef ore Hughes
stepped in "'i th $17.5 million to
buy it.
Se1iators
Play Ball
With Staffs
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen.
Alan Cranston, (0-Callf.), has
his "Angels,'' and Sen. J,
William Fulbright (!>Ark.),
has the ·'Dissenters."
It's all part of a summer
softball league for staffs of
senators. The rules call for at
leas t three girls ifi · every
lineup, and the question of
whether someone deserves to
be safe at first is open to
filibuster.
Jn their last outing, the
Dissenters downed the Angels,
12·3, with Fulbright on the
mound briefly. He gave up one
hit, a double, lo Cranston.
Cranston didn 't bat again,
preferring instead to jog
around West Potomac Park
the rest of the time.
Other teams include the
''Abe's Babes" of Sen .
Abraham A. Ribicoff, (I>
Conn.,) and the staffers of
Sen. Russell 8. Long, ( 0-La.,}
known as the "Longshots."
Brothers lftaited
.Ji. statue of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was
added to the present memorial of "President Ken-
nedy and Soil" during ceremonies at St. Augustine 's
School In Franklin Par~1 N.J. The new work also
was done by Ferruccio vezonni of Italy.
98' Value Quality
Plastic\vare
YC>Ua CHOICI
IJ' I""......, ......
.... e l o., ........ 11owt
-,.:ii.,. nMf -.al-., . ..., __ _
-Cllbl for ...,. .... -
.... '11ibAy ...... ,
.39• i-t Self Ad!Mslv•
Zic• I ..., ......... ...... t-!ti,.3:29c u11.••• ., I .......
Carpet Tiles . ., .... 29 ....,...u;,. C marlom pol,.
..... witll • .1-....wo. ha<k1, •lf-otick !ape. r..at .... ...! -.ildl-ir.
lie-SI .II AltOrhll
5111 .. &Sds..s
16" Value!
·Adjustable.
Ironing Board
bllOI ...... odjml-=it,;"':',~ 2 " _,,~ ptifowod lop
f o r tee I ilOllifi& ruMm liPf'l'll feel.
139" Value! Decorator
Grape Swag Lamps
.... 59'1.8""'8'•
Miracle Tape
m" !:. ":;.;w.,. 3· 7' • 'f'l'liailioio ! Y""
-•rilcm it.
.'•j lrlte lnenlllle
Watch lamb
119. 39' M1 .. 1tlc
Recording Tape
~::"i~t:U: 27' ............... ~ ........ .i..y;. . .
$J996
•1.50 c.r-lc
Child Figures
~!<: ... -....i. ~:r~ 99' k<:tun. '""" .. u.-. '
... '2" Dry._,
Photo Albums
l1pl• IJK te $5'1
Chlld'• Books
r..iie•w l ,_ .............. ,9c .Pio:-kNf '*"'"" l'ti.,T~a..;.:.. -·
,.
'2" Aladdin
Quart Vacuum
> -•• '> .. •y,.,_, rle-•-4===
Bottle
!:: $J72
~~ .,, ....... ..w , ............. :.
:::.~;' I
.
'9'" Yaluel Z.llco
lod& ... , .... $555 ...
s..-. sc.u ....... -1-r
--. ..i ... "' :i!':: ... .... p.,{«df
T•leModel
111 hJl-M
::-,.";':"":'~ $333 ~d•lffu.. ...... .i;.i.w. -Air C11l1• Car
' s.tenwo.
, ..... '"99 !M .,a11wo dri•· C .... ~ ... "*"lit prim!!
'1A9YaLIPlhw
Alrlkttren ,.,,,,. ...... 94' ewe liH. lklt<OI·
on! ':.J::; ........
-69' ea. Aloha
(harcoal
·:.~2i99c
•J.37 2-Rlnt
INR.ATAILI
Wading 14111" Pllllltl TlllllT
Pool Beach Towels
~.i,,,.,1or ~!E $J57 ' ·-99' -f ... !BO.c • ~ bd1t -a, lbril' ......... _,.....,
'9.91 FleJ<·Wall '3" Metal J..-
6 ft. Swim Pools Sunglasses
26, gal. Op,ocilf. Groo•.J.rf,: ' IL ,. I} in. ·~ "'" ..,.. $866 -'•" ·~·$257 otl "'-'· Qai ... no -.! lo in· ~ r.....,. 11y1o11 ...... !'ft·---r-;.,.., ""'· !loot """! •5.94 v.1 .. 1 'IA9 flowered
2 Gal. Picnic Ju9 Swim Caps
Haodp ~" .. Cl>lo1>...dot11n 87( '··~ -.. b $399 toh• .... • kce,. """ fill btllO _,. • drr. Slft 0; ill ~ •. 1-i.i. ..,
.i piooijt,
15' Coppertooe '2" 50" &otham
Tanning lutter Swim & Surf Id.
ll ich ffi """"" 'W<i11lill~•• 1"t
bll!ltt ond coro-73'
r ...aia111 ;..i;,..
flwl 11il fer !ht tnJctiblr. f.•plori-$J55 hnf u~ "" '"'" ol rol~-
lifl:r l}I °""ju. ,.....,. -.w. -·-· ..
'
'"' JllM CtPillr-: J1cll: I••-·
lorttfl "'""''' Jo,..,., M1nrl<11Hl. JOlll SotQ. (llrl$19'1flfr WllV-Mlllllll.
SINOMf 9..0: JtM GrtJ'I!, ll(~ltfmln, ll1!11Mltl Ltul>t<,
Wlll!1mt.
SvrttlM: Ernest C.rro11.
Wt1Tmln1I•; "111 Adtm, ltallfo<I
"-d~m. 8•en1ot1 Almond, Pt'<lro "•nold,
Vlrglnft Berton, Ot<>nl1 Beath, Clark
fl•nltr. Georve Sinvo. Robert Burnett,
,.dice C!trk. Wt'ff~ Cornelius, L1urttn C•l~ll, Ron.aid Cr1~U. Vicki OrOll•
1"9et. Tl'lomls EvM>t, 6rt<>I Giibert, Howtrd Ga;~n. Lee HtrMllMlo
ErnUI Hlgl!, Mtn~t HI..-. Joh!> L1wJ1, Eitw.ro L¥Dft1. <>-tit Mt nnl(llt. TN M(.CtrlY Jr,, liloberkl
Mlll)l>t'll1. Mt•11rett•' MurdDCt. Dav-Id M11rltt(I, Edw&n:I Plr~er, B•rbllrt
PtvH, (;p(Cllon' P-•· 0.1111(1 Ptrrl ...
Rune!! IU~r, Terrill liloOfruon,
IUV.ard Sclllrthz. l turt Slider, 8tHll
s11"'. 0111111<1 Sclt~e•ltnd. T"""'91
SWtrfr, J1111 S•laitt, RoOert Wltli.m., Er""°rWlnsor.
s3so Curl Free ~lliru .... $239
•'o....~ ...... 14&11
s1 25 Dippity Do
$ oo • · SPRAY ~ ·-64 I D•al oEoooRur.......... .
;I-;; Colgate 100 ~'lt.~. 88'
'"""'" 47c 69' Alka Seltzer ••••
4S~ic.i~~1iiViw"·2: 69'
U Bayer Aspirin •• 42'
5'""3"•"cu"'ra'·d-OUCMLlSS 2: 59c •• UIDAGES.. • .
-----49' 79' Murine ~X~PS ........ .
98' Women's Cott~
Flop Hats
77c
Boys' 2 Piece Italian Leather
Sandals Short Sets --:;:::\ :-.:::: '~ .$,26
,..i;.t °""" "' mud! .. npc:1 ol>i11-2.1:
•r Value! Vinyl
Wet Look Luggage
11" Women's
Jamaica Shorts
:-::r.:r:; $J29
Sale of Men's
Swim Suits
:::.;:'1r.:l:: $298 161ndt5a. --$399 <l>lloe """"" l'ly r'°"" 2 (<DN """ bu. Sias .. !L
14•to •6•Values!
"Debbie" IHI Hlit
~elash::
~,,,.$, .....
Glo-l•t••• ..... ._ ...... ---"' llld. ...... 1'1~11--.
••N •o p0lr f.,.q ' ...tw...d.Wi..t.
Month-End
Sale
SAVE VP ro 14
AHDMDU · ......... ....... _~ ._ ............. ,_,.....,..., ..._.. .......... ...., ...... ~·:::....w.,....~., ...
1
1
FlidoJ, m 27, 1969
.
1 ··1( ER.
• •
.A "(o .mple te Guide • • • Where to go • • • I What to do • ••
• f • DAILY "'°'1.0 ~ ••'fl'tl"O'Dtl!""'
·A ·BROKEN WAGON. STANDS MOTIONLESS IN FRONT OF BODIE'S·ODD F.ELL-OWS HALL AHO ORIGINAL POST OFFIC!
Bodie Ghos·t Town Recalls Era
Btid,men Gone, But Rough, Wicked Mining Days Still H~re
' . . ' ' . ' ' -• y • •• ;.. • • ..
I ! • ' By PATRICK O'DONNELL really a composlle of many bad men roll-.. °' IH 041..-Pillt s1.11 ed up into one.
The "Badman from Bodie'.'• I! gone The c:olorful mining camp, often noted
oow, and where some of \hi: roughest ~nd in the writings of Mark Twain, yielded
toughest m,en , of. the west once ·walkea over 80 million dollars during its heyday.
tourists now .stroll and wonder: Nowadays the only badmen of Bodie
Bodie, located 18 miles f~m MonO are tourists who find it an exciting place
Lake in l\.fono Counly, is a genuine to visit.
Califomi3 'goldmining ghost town. It w.ii.s Bodie, now· a State Historic Park, is n:amoo after Waterman S. ~ody, who open during the su mmer mcinth.s. There
disco~ered gold there in 1859. The chaogc is no charge for admi53ion.
ill spelling, qften attrlbuled to an il-One of the m06t t n t e r e s t i n g
Jiterate sign painter, was in fact a buildings slill standing in Bodie is the
deliberate change by the citlzcnrr to in· James stuart Cain residence. Caln ar·
sure proper pronunc;iation of the town '.s rived in Bodie when he was 25 and en-
nan1e. tered the lumber business placing barge!
By 1879 Bodie h;:id a population of more on ~fono Lake lo transport timber to the
lban te.n thousand anQ. according to ~ Bodie mines. Later he leased a block of
St.ate Pai"k pamphlet,. was "second to
none for wickedness, bai:lmen and had the
worst ell.mate out of doors ." The cry,,
'"Goodbye, God, I'm going to Bodje," was
on1y half jest. •
A killing occurred once a day and rob-
beries, stage holdups and street fights
were a reular happening in the town ·Ula:t
had 65 saloons. A clergyman who arrived
in Bodie Jn' 1881 saw it as a "sea of sin,
lashed by the tempests of lust and
Jiassion."
The famous "iJadmaii Crom Bodie" ae-
c:yrding to-historians, could have been a
person · named Tom Adams or maybe he
wis Washoe Pete. Some think he was
WEEKENDER
1 INSIDE FEATIJRES l A new book, ''Spencer Tracy,"
and its author, Iormer Orange
Counlian Larry Swindell , are the
subjects o! Tom Titus' Intermis-
sion column on Page 24.
Travel P.•J• !t
J
Gulde lo Fu• -~ge U
Out ~N' Aboot Pitel %5-%'1
Rodeo Page %1
r In the Gall'rl's Pqe %'1
Gllkle to Film1 Pap 21
Myrna Loy P1g:t !I •
Qw<ale Pace II
Comics Papzt1 · TV Views PIP II
'relttl1"" Uc Pep tt
Royal Biiiet Pa1e 38
Uve 'nteltft Page :st I ! 1Adclell'1 Glll<rJ Pep II
grounj! frorrr'\he mine company and took
out ~000 in.gold In 90 daya. Cain was to ·
becorTI.c the principal pi'opcrty ' owner in
BodiC. '
Add.i~onal Photos, Page Z
Another bUilding; standing much as it
was in the 1870's, is the town jail. It 111
said that the structure was never used
much and for the few who were gueslS
bail was $5.
Much or the town was destroyed by a
firC In 1892 and another in 1932. Visitors
are asked to smoke only in posted areas
because all of the structures are made ol
wood and can burn very easily.
There are no services In Bodie so It is a
good idea to fill your gas tank and take
.
I,' I
along a sa~;Jun.ch. ·7
To get lhere from Orange~Coun · t.afe·
the Riverside Freeway to Highwty ,395
and head · norlh. The park is on t:Bod ie
Road, 13 miles east of its junction with
Slate Highway 395, six mlles 1South Of ihe
city of Bridgeport.
A word or caution, the 13 mile road into
Bodie is not paved and that little drive i.11
a mean piece or territory. A gas station
attendant near the Bodle turno(f said .he
sells ten sets of tires a day on weekends
to travelers who take the road too fast.
Off-season visitors to Bodie are cau·
tioned to check at Brld11eport, · Mono
County se~t. for road and weatbtr con-
ditions before making the trip into the old
ghosl town.
THE U.S. LAND OFFICE AT GREEN AND MAIN STREETS WAS CENTER OF TOWN
OLD HOUSE STANDS VACANT IN GHOST TOW~
' ;RollflWood Backstage
·· Yanl{s Wise Up to Limeys
By VERNON SCOIT
U,1 KtltrwM C•rt'l'On .....
HOLLYWOOD -The subsiding bars of
"Rule Britannia," like Cornwallis at
·Yorktown; Is a knell of sorts for the Bri·
lish in Hallywood.
Si'mi lar-to the Redeoals of ·oJd who had
only le make an appearance to terrify
the Cok>nt8t!I, so did the great wa ve of
Britlslli actors only show up in a movie
'to ·1t1ake k~a success.
But We prOvinclals are wlselng up.
· A British accent does t
not portend unforget·
table acting.
First to admit It l!
1i11chael Caine, a clever
cockney who performed
brilliantly la "Alfie"
and "The lpcress
File."
"American audiences
are less prcpiired to ac-
cept free.ly anyone who 111cKAaa H.t.11111s
comes along rfom England now," he said.
"\Ve have to look to our laurels because
the novelty has worn otf:''
Richard Burton, a W:elshman, might
concur. Hi~ last few pictures, in tandem
with wife Elitabeth Ta1lor, might have
been one of the stumbling blocks to the
acceptance of Britain in the common
market.
"This country -America -has ac·
cepted Peter O'Toole. Albert Finney, n1y-
Helf, Sean Connery. Richard Harris,
Peter Sellers and others," Caine said.
"It is important to us-that we gained
recognition here In order lo become truly
inlemational stars.
"At first it was just enough to be Brl·
tish. Now America is coming up with a
crop of fine actors. or if you wish, mov~e
st.a rs -Dustin Horrman, Cllnt Eastwood,
\Varren Beatty. ·
"No British accents there."
Caiiic is a thoroUghly ilkeable man who
has gained,a rep,utation as a swinger with
fhe ·1adie!I, sOrt, Or <in Anglo-Saxon Omar
Sharif. ' ·
•·c;ooc1 L.ord~ it's a false.hood," the Eng.
'li!iiman exclaimed. "I'm not at all.happy
with lhis ersatz Errol Flynn lma«e 1 I
have orrscreen. The idea or girls falHng
into my lap is preposterous. 1 have to
ch~ them just like anyone else."
Caine •ruefu0y slpJ)ed .a glass Of br8ridy
during his cur.rent film. "Too Late Ute
l{erc."
"I would burst into laughter If_ I 11iad
,~ to play1a man with the repuutkm I'm
supposed to liave with the ladlts. Al·
thotlgh 1 must adrhit it would be pleasant
to have them swarming around.''
0£ the work he's done thus far -on.
screen. that is-'Caine is most Impressed
with "The Italian Job," an unreleased
'comedy In wtµch he plays an underworld
twit sent by an EngU sh gangster bo.u
(Noel Coward) to rob ltaly of gold bul-
liOO:
"I've worked \vith the Olm since It was
first g1yen me ~ a four-page outline,''
Gaine conclu'd,ed, ''and I'm 8100ous ror
ft to be.released In this country. Believe
me. there.'i mOre· to it than English ac-
cents.·•
Weekend Highlights
HOME SHOW -The ,Orange County Home and Decoralor
·Show.will be staged through Sunday, June 30. at the Anaheim
Convention Center in the Exhibition Hall, 800 West Kate)la Ave.,
Anaheim. Hundreds of exhibits by decorators and home
builders will be1on display BS weU BS some commercial home
appliance and accessories displays. Hoyrs are 5 to 11 p.m. 1 June 27; noon to 1 p.m. June 211-29. Tlcke!s·'at the box office.
DON RICKLES SHOW -Melodyland "Theatre, 10 Freed-
man \Vay. Anaheim is staging the Ooq Rickles Show through
Sunday, June 29. Anpearing with Rtckles la his special ~uest
star Kaye Stevens. Performal)ces ate set for 8:3() p:m. toni~ht:
7 and 10 p.m. Saturday, and 5 and 8:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets
at box oUice.
JOAN BAEZ CONCERT -The Arena o! the Anaheim Con-
vention Center, 800 Katella Ave .. Anaheim, will be the con~rt
hall !br the Joan Baez songfest Saturday, June 28 at 8:30 p.m.
,Tickets are available at the box office 0£ the center •
·-~---
-~------------r ----------------··-
U OAILY PILOT '""'· Juot 77, l""
---· 'I.::~ D LAP.LANE A'l'HENL -fte bouzoukia tavernas
11111 Jllay lllat.lllullllll•· "Zorbe , the Greek" music.
But .!lie -~« thing-la out -remember
the movie "Never On Sunday?"
The customer. overcome with the sadness of
music and life, paid for and smash':d gla ss after
glass. (The sad rich hired a sad waiter to sn1ash
glasses for them.)
Never on Sunday. Or any other day. ••cut it out " said the new Greek ~overnment.
"lt makes the 1Greeks look like barbanans."
* IT'S SUNNY summer now in Greece. The hid ..
away island is Lemnos, famed for figs and wine. A
DC-3 rues dally from Athens. Only one hotel, the
luxury Akti Myrina Bungalows. About $22 a day for
two with all meals. Warm, blue Aegean waters. ~iles of beach to
yourself. 'lb.e hotel puts a basket 1n your room so
you can go out and pt.ct your own fruit on the
grounds.
0 Last year the grapes were so plentiful, we
uked the gu..U to help us make the wine. It turn-
ed out very well."
*
.,. __ ree· Teen ·
Dances· Set · -•
-, -Jllllrt* ' _.. ___:_
WESTMINSTER JIJNIQll -IWrDii~.ftl ~ ~ CM I
of Westminster lnvit .. .ii ........ t'f~ Uvltic
· in Westminster to at.iml: Cbllr' ~ ilctui:ta a
donce each FrL night, 7;30 to 1;30, at U>.e Weotmlnlter c.m.
munlty Cent.tr, 8200 Westminster Ave; "Rapp" mullcal croup
will play for the dance June 27. Admisalon, 50 cents.
JUNE fl
JUNIOR WGH DANCE -Fountain Valley Park and Roe>
reaUon Deparlmenl i. boldlng a donce for 7th and Ith rrod·
ers on June 21 from 1 to 9 p.m. at the community center,
10200 Slater Ave., FOWltaln Valley. Playing for thls Friday'•
event will be "11>e Wildwood Blues" group. Admlulon ii
25 cent.a. For information Phone fl62.2424. Dancel will be bdd
every other .Fri. Nighl
JUNE fl.zt
ROME SHOW -'l1>e Orange County Home and ~
Show will be held in the Exhibition HaD of the Anlbefm
Ccnve.ntion Center, June 27-29. Hourt are 5 p.m. lo 11 p.m.
tonight: noon to 11, June 28-29. Tickets, available at the
boxoffice. $1.7$ for aduJta, $1 for Juniors.
JUNE 21-H
ANGEL BASEBAIL -In U>.e Anaheim Stadium, lllOll 5tole
College Blvd., An1hetm. AD night pme1 are at I p.m.; day
games start at 1 p.m. Ticketa available at all ticket qenciel
and the bor office. Phone m.a>OO. Angela: v1. StaWe June
21-IS (N), 211 W )-
JUNE 21.zt "Wh•t 11 tti. cost •nd how do you go •bout got·
ting • crvlM In the GrMk lsl•nd•?" WAGON WHEELS BROUGHT lD,GIO PEOPLE TO BODIE IN THE GOLD RUSH OF lm DON RICKLD SHOW -Melodyland t1>ealre, 10 Freedmlm
Way, AllahOim, will Ila(• U>.e !loo Rlctles' Show with Koje
Stevens as special 111et1 star, June :l/·211. Perl~ will
be held atl;30 p.m., Fri.; 7 and 10 p.m. Sal, and$ and l :IO .
p.m. Sun. Ticketa available at box office and most t.k:ktt
agencies.
All travel agents sell them, but I'd specify Epi-
rotiki Lines. Ask for their new HQrpbeus•• -it's
most luxuriou.B, we were on it for lunch yesterday.
Cruises run two days, five days, seven days. About
$45 a day.
* You might get a preview on all these ships by
asking for colored folders. Write Connir. Soloyanis,
Epirotiki Lines, 2 Bouboulinas str., Piraeus, Greece.
Also ask him to send you the Astir folders. An ex·
cellent hotel chain with places in parts of Greece
you wouldn't find .
* "'Anything •• should know before eoinsi to
Greecie ••• ?'' . Cigarettes will cost you $1 a pa ckage. Bring in
two cartons. U you run ou t, try the local Papastra-.
tos. No free matches-it's a Government monopoly.
Carry a ligllter.
* Greek food just so-so. Runs heavily to lamb.
Sea food very good. Steaks frljlblfl_ll Wine is lair.
White, St. Helena. Red, Chevalier de Rhodes. Beer
ts good -I prefer the AmsteL Don't buy the wine
that's been spiked with turpentine "retsina." The
Greeks adore it. But you'll be sorry.
* GREEKS DON'T tip taxi drivers. Tourials us-
ually do. A service charge tip is added to your res.
taurant bill. Custom is to leave five percent more.
On the plate! That's for the waiter. Now, leeve a
litUe -one per cent on the table cloth! That'a for
the bus boy. The j>oor kid g.U nothing else.
JUNE II
TEEN a.ua DANCE -'l1>e Wetlmlntter l\ecreaUm ad
Parts Department will bold a Teen Club Dance in the cun-
munity Center, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for WestmlMter
Teena) each Sal from I p.m. to mldnighL Admllllon, •L
JUNE II
JOAN BAEZ CONCERT -Anah<lm ConvenUoo C<nle<, 800
West ~ Ave., Anaheim, will !lage a concert with Jam
Baez at 8:30 p.m. Sat, June 28. All ticket! are a and may
be obtained .at the Convention Center box (J(fice or moat
UckeL agencies.
JUNE 11-ZI
HORBE SHOW -'l1>e San Bernardino Sunset Valley Riden
Open Horse Show and Gymkhana will be held in the arena
at Raocbo California on Sat. and Sun., June 2&-29 beginninC
at 9 a.m. each day. Combined with it will be a 4-H HCl"le-
mansblp Clinic. Admilaion is free. Rancho California ii i.
cat.eel on Highway 395, midway between Riverside and SID
Diego.
JUNE II -JULY II
PADUA RllJ.S PLAY -The Paduo Hillt Theatre la pre-
senting "Serenade oo Veracruz," with aulhenUc muric and
dances from Mexico, through July 26, at 2:30 and 8:30 p.m.
Wed. through Sal. Adjolnln& tbe 300 ..U air......tiUooed
!healer la tbe Podaa dining room where tbe playen fl!llertoln
during hmcfl and dbmer. Malcan and American food la oerv-
ed daily, n:cept Mon. Padua Hills is: located on Padua Ave.,
three_ m11.. north GI Footblll Blvd. in Clar<mooL Pbooe
!-
JUNE II • J\ILY U
But -don't let your sympathy get away with
you. The bus boy: Up MUST be amaller ,pi.I-the
waiter's. Or you've insulted the waiter by putting
him oo a bus boy level. He'll hate you forever.
BODIE'S FIRST MINE OPENED l_N 115' AND YIELDED NEARLY $15 MILLION. IN 25 YEARS
ll!llllE RACING -~IJlhlnd racing at Ho~
PIR, Century Blvd., at Prairie Ave., Inglewood ia llChed-
uled Tues. • Sat. lhroop July 13. Post time ,, .. kdays U;41,
Sat., 1:15 p.m. f15,00I) Vanity u..ttcap, Sal, June 21.
~ JUNE ..
* ''We've been told to go to the isl•nd of Mykonos
and how do you get there?''
Been discovered by the jet set (I saw Jacltie
Ker1oedy there before she married Onassis.) Now.
l don't mean it's luxurious -it's just popular. Not
a hideaway place like Lemnos. Fisbiog village town .
Every waterfront cafe jammed with students on the
cheap. One luxury hotel on a fine sand beach; $20
a day !or two with all meals.
Sandra Dee Says Pies 'Junk'
POPS CONCERT -A Concert with 3$ musicians under the
direction of Henry Brandon will be conducted in the mall at
Jl'ubioa i.land, Newport lloacb, each Mon. at t p.m. No
ai!mlasloncharge.
JUNE 30 -J\ILY I
lilsNEYLAND SHOW -British musical star, Shani Wallis.
, *
By VERNON SC01T
HOU.YWOOD ~ .,I ha\.·e
starrtd in 25 motion pictures
and 24 of them were junk,"
Sandra Dee said this week.
She meant it.
ramshackle soundstage a l
Producers Studio malting a
nC\\' film for Amer i Can
International Pictures \\'hich is
not exactly the Rolls Royce of
studios,
life she has pl3yed unrealistic
Dolly.l'.>imple roles there while
!he with-it generation rubbed
its collective eyes in disbelief
-and qull buying Uwi..
Students make tt in private homes for a dollar
a day. You go over by shjp, five hours from Athens.
Or, Onassis runs a helicopter service. I took the
ship. A breezy, blue sea ride. (students get an in·
credibly Jaw rate. The Greek government caters 1o
student travelers.)
"The only good picture I
made was my first one -
'Until They Sail' -and that
was ~·hen I was 13 years old."
Sandra was sitting in a
trailer-dressing room on a
The aclre5."'., however ,
recently left Hollywood's top
studio -Universa.1 -with
great relief and some bll·
lerness.
For almost all of her aduJt
"I was the poor man 's Doris
Day," she lamented. "For 18
years I was expected to live
up to my goodie two-shoes im-
age. I'm not kidding, ooe bit,"
Miss Dee said, more amused
than angered.
>
'Spencer Tracy' Fascinating Book
By TOM TITUS
When be . lived on tl'.e ·Orange Coast.
Larry: Swindell never failed to impress
his friends with his remarkable knowl -
edge of the movies. At parties, he took
center stage in the heyday cf trivia
games, nol onl)' ol the Hollywood variety,
but of entertainment in general,
Thwi: it was not too surprising to learn
tha.t SwindeU was probably the foremcst
authority oo the life of Spencer Tracy.
outside of the actor's immediate clrcle of
family and friends . For some 15 years
before Tracy's death in June. 1967 Swin-
dell had been quiet-•rJ• -· ly researching the
life ol this Holly·
wood giant who be--
came a legend in his
craft and a star cf
the magnitude which
few actors attain.
The result of all
this homework is
now in the nation's
bookstalls -an im-LU:•T IWIMDllU.
IJOSlng biography which dlronlcles vir·
tually every significant moment in the
life of one ot the screen's all.time greats.
For even the casual movie fan, U makes
fascinaliDC reading.
EN11TLED SIMPLY ''Spencer Tracy,"
the book traces the actor's life and career
In intimate detail, renectlng the author's
personal thoroughness and altenUon to
t.be fiMst points. In its earlier chapters il
borders oo a clinical case history, but
even in recruting Tracy'a most mun.
dane m.....is, Swindell pa1ni. them
With an involving narrativt style th.at ,....
makes -passag" highly relevant.
1be book follows Tracy closely from
bli1b lo duth, and brin&• out an upt<I
GI bis coreer ill which probably eveo bis
most devoted fans were UMware -that
he re<d•ed bis initial troioing In U>.e
legitimate theater. Tracy had, in fact,
spent a full dxade in live theater belore
the "talkies" beckoned him in 1930 fM
a picture called "l'p the River" with
another up and coming young actor
named Hum!J!lre\1 Bcgarl.
ll t!i ti1c<1trlcal training earned him an
t'nvi:1blc reputation in Hollywood of be-
in& able to memorize huge chunks of
dialogue \\·ithou l difficulty. Tracy was a
'·one take'' actor, and became l1l06t up-
set \\·hen his scenes were resbot for lhe
bcneril of another cast member.
AS SWINDELL POL'ITS out in his final
chapter. Spencer Tracy was a product of
the Hollywood syslem of the 1930's and
40·s which based stardom on the qualifi.
cations of ability, durability, individuality
and identifictalon with a quality product.
At bis peak, he ranked with Gable. 84>
gart and Cooper, but unlike these stars,
he managed the transition so difficult to
leading men. that of growing into charac·
ter roles while retaining hls superstar
:status.
The book makes it clear that Tracy's
first and fore.most lo\·e was hls work, hls
career. He possessed a mania for con·
centratlon and perfec tion "·hich estrang-
ed him from bis family and later from
bis friends . He succumbed irutially lo the
stormy offscreen life enjoyed by many
scrten stars, but later withdrew to a
small coterie of acquaintances which of.
ten did not include his family,
Tracy's "unspoken" relationship with
Kathartne Hepburn is diJcuMed in delail
in the book, yet the fmal conclusian is
left to the reader. Swindell not.es: that
"for a quarter of a century they were a
quiet, durable. faithful, oddly matched
couple everyone in Hollywood lmtw"
about tnd~iquely-no one ever g05-
1.lped •bout"
STEP BY STEP, play by ploy and
movie by movie, Swindell has falth!ul4'
traced the footsteps of Spencer Tracy,
offering a sidelight for every production.
He also delves deeply into the machlna-
Uom of moviem.aking, the backstage ma-
nipulating at M-G-M and other studios
during Tracy's long carett.
And quite a career it was. It began
two ~ after the advent of talkies and
ended only with Tracy's death. 74 pic-
tures Jater and just 1$ da)" after the!!
completion of •·Guess Who's Coming to
Dinner" t1\·o years ago.
For a dramatic "sock fi.nish." the book
has ooly to foUow recent history, for
everyone on the set of .. Dinner'' kne•
'l'racy Wll.$ dying and wondered whether
Ile could poosibly make It lhfOOlb the
filming. Insurance companies would not
cover him and director Stanley Kramer
personally took on the respoa.sibllity.
Of course it was com pleted, and in bis
prologue, S"·indell recreates that final
moment when lbe last scene from the
picture was shot. There wasn ·l a dry eye
on the set.
IT IS AN ENGROSSING, a!J.encom.
passing tribute lo one of America's crut·
est actors--and a triumph (« it.s aulbor.
a former Costa Meu and Laguna Beach
resident who intends to return to the
Orange Coast nut year. His wife, Ellie.
is well known as a muslcaJ thester ac-
tress.
Of his SllCC<SS with "Spencer Tnley."
bis first book Swindell writ .. , "rm pill~
osophical. I know U>.e book C<1Uld !love
been better. I also koow il could !love
been """"· Anyway, rm no1 oshlmed
of it, and U>.e excilemeot o1 pubUcall-On
can gpeU '°""'thing omounting to pnde-''
At tbe l1IOlllelll Lany Swindell i.
awaiting a new caotract for another
book. this one the life story of John Gar·
field . If it should turn out to be baU u
intriguing as the Tracy bloerapby, It will
be wtll worth waiting tor.
• • . \
''The studi Uv and Will headline Dl.soeyland's stage show, June 30 . July 4. A~
members of ~ex;:_ :!c,, to :waring 'ft'ith htt will be the Osm<l>d B~others, Disneyland. :
call Lill! Nell They'd pat Dancers and John Scott Trotter and his ordlestra. Show
me the .:Ud ~ call me ··times are a and IO p.m. n1gbt1y. Jay and the Americans wtD.
filUeOllcirl lat appearing on the Tomorrowland Temtee with perfomr
''Well, ·I'm startmg fresh ances at 9 and 11 p.m. ~tre.wo~ks at t p.m. nightly. Park
now I'm a yoong adult and J ciperu1 at 8 a.m. Closes mtdnight Sun. • Thurs.; 1 a.m. Fri. doo'i: want to be everybody's and Sat nights. JUNI! •• J\IL y z little girl."
Sandra and Universal par-
ted after she refused picture
after picture.
Of her last movie there,
"The Manhunter," Sa ad r a
said: "It's so bad they can't
rtltaa jl I was embarrassed
to go oa the set and read the --'-n.ty had me playing • Ca-
jun girl in the backwoods. But
in every sceoe my hair wu
perfectly combed and bleach-
ed a faultless blonde. Are you
ready for this kind of in·
sanity?"
DODGER BASEBAU -Dodger Sladlum, 1750 Stadium
\I.ray, Los Angeles. Day games start at 1 p.m.; Night games
at a p.m. and Twi-night double headers at 6 p.m. ~
vs A!Kros, June 30, July 1, 2. AU night games. For ticket
information phone (213) 225-1411 or ticket agencies.
J\ILY 4
FIREWORKS SHOW-Le Bard Stadium at Orange Coatt
College, 1101 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa will have a fireworb
show apoosored by tbe Orlll/l• Coatt YMCA al 7;30 p.m.,
July •-Entertainment precedlng the show will Include U>.e
Glengarry Hilblanders and the OC Sing Out Group. ~
ct.eds from the show will be used for the YMCA swimming
facilities. Advance tickets, $1.75 for adults; 7S eents for chll·
dren under U, may be purchased at the OC-YMCA, 2300
UnJvenity Ave., Newport Beach. They also will be sold at
the gate on the ni&ht cf the even!.
Next Week is 4th of July Weekend!
We'll b• op•n •II day (w• always are 1, ind we'll be deliv•rin 9 "THI WORLDS
FINIST PRODUCE" to all our r•sfaurent accounts. No need to ovantoclc your
coolers, just call us • •• we'll be there.
For our retail custom•rs, we'll have everything for your picn ics. Com with hush.
grown especially for us, cold watermelons, loc1I tomatoes, in short wrLL HA.YI
MIYTHINfil COMI S&I COME SAVI!
CUP THESE COUPONS AND SAYll
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Plrtt Of The Leal • ln1" It Now • fer HNlth'• S.ke • • ZU',_ rA111ru • If• ·cheep Here • O"'anlc Grft'n a
• ~UN .NWUf1 • ..... ... ICllllG • CUCUMBERS • .., ... _... ..... • LETTUCE • : • IOC I& • IAI • 5 For IOC • a L"'9ft -I U.. a .,. la. a Limit 5 a
• With TMI C..,,... a Ll,.dt S With Till1 Couptn W Wltft Thl1 c_,.,. ·····························' ~ COUPONS EXPlll JULY 2ND
In their never 1ndin9 search to 9iY1 you the finest foods obtainable, th111 fine
rest•ur•nts 11rv1 N...,.t ""•die. ••• p.troni11 them, CINstes lktro. La1d11
..... ;V.. 1-. n. fW:Mll •• N..,.., ....._ Yllf:ltt CW. •nd over 200 oth-
ers. How 1bout you ullin9 us?
"ORANGE COUNTY'S FASTEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGANI ZATION"
~ NE!f!.~~!. !~~~.~CE§
•32 Y .. ,. of Prod11«
K"°'°"How"
"'Where QualUJI 11 TM
Order of The RoU11"
'rld<1, Junt 27, 1169 DAILY J'!lDT ff
OUT 'N' WEEKENDER ABOUT By
NORM STANLEY
O RAN GE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT , NIGHT C LUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE
•
To You, Ducky!
Perhaps the image of Donald and. Daisy .Duck
as beings only slightly Jess than human is starting to
fade.
~1aybe Joe Penner's old salutation, "Wanna
buy a duck?", is just catching.up to the times.
Som;thing, at any rate, h·as to explain the in·
creased popularity of duck as one of the stellar en·
trees on so many of our better restaurants• menus.
This mi~hty savory fo\11! shouJd have been a leading
contender in any poll of favorites long ago.
Not that duck meat has gone unappreciated
through the years. Stronger in flavor. than turkey or
chicken. it has always had a sizable club of
boosters.
SERVING VARIETIES
And the delectable ways it's served in a
number of local spots give rise to new fans every
day.
Before we run down that list, however, a little
background on these 'vef>..footed swimming birds of
the family Anatidae might prove useful. Certainly
the informatior. could be used to convince the waiter
he's serving a real connoisseur.
\Vlld duck. it seems. has been a preferred
game since Paleolithic 1nan learned to hunt . But
history failed to record \\1hen domestication o! the
birds began.
One footnote tell s us that Peking duck -the
strain ho\v raised domestically in the U.S. -
descends from the Chinese bird that was among the
earliest varieties bred for the dinner table.
N. Y. LOCALE
Don't be surprised at the f r e q u en c y
SUPERB DINING
SPECIALIZING IN STEAKS, PRIME RIB
Servin9 from S p.m.
WITH ACCOMPANYING
ENTERTAINMENT
Now Appearinq . . Last Week
SANDRA LEE
PIANO, ORGAN, SONG STYllST
AND
VIC DUO
BASS & DRUMS
Mon.-.Sot.-8:30·1 :30
24031 El Toro Road
leisure World
Laguna Hills,. C11if.
R•1•rv•tion1 117·0969
';;'.and kids like Mr. Steak, too
Once they've been
there, you won1 find
1he small frf wagging
their heels when you
mention having diMeC
(or lunch} at Mr.Stea~
ihey·n have their own
special menu that they
c:an punch out to make
a Mr. Steak mask. If s
f un for them and their
little hands will be busy
while they're waiting.
A curtous thing, most
parents leave Mr.Steak
feeling that their wee
ones brought them out
1o eat! Incidentally, we
don'tserre liquor.
OPEN EVERY DAY
.FA9M 11 AM TO I I'll
22'7 PAIRYlfW ret Wth.ti,
COSTA MESA 142-07)2
restaurants oiler Long Island duck or duckling . This
part of New York produces a major portion of the
country's suppl)'.
A mere 53 Long Island duck farmers raise
nearly 7 ,000,000 birds annually. Their product is
gE>nerally regarded as ~he finest tame duck grown
anywhere.
To assure maximum customer satisfacUon , a
thorough chef will require plump, compact birds
that are well fleshed and have a clean, unbruised
and unbroken skin. A frozen duck should not be
defrosted untii just before it is to be cooked.
All dark. duck meat furnishes high~quality
protein, vitamins and minerals. It is particularly
rich in iron and high in thiamin (vitamin Bl) and
ribo flavin.
FAT FOWL
Ducks possess a large amount of fat that
enhances the flavor and makes them especially
tender and juiC'y for roasting. But it's important for
excessive Cat to be cut and-o r dripped away during
the roasting period.
The bird is often offered on menu s as duck a I'
orange. In this method of preparation ingredients
called upon are butter, bouillon, dry white wine ,
veal knuckle, oranges, salt and pepper.
HERE'S HOW
The duck is first bro\\1ned well on all sides
over a moderate heat, then seasoned with salt and
pepper. The bouillon, wine and veal bones are added
and it's covered to simmer for several hours in a
large pan with melted butter.
Following this, the sauce is removed from the
pan. strained, returned with the addition of orange
juice and rind cut in thin strips, and boiled briefly.
It is then poured over the duck, which has been plac-
ed on a serving platter and garnished with orange
slices.
More often than not, the dish is accompanied
by some type of rice .
••• ReHrvatlon1: 4944574
Open D1ily Oi~l~wers e LUNCHEON
• • llSTAUIANT AND
e DINNER.
• SUNDAY IR.UNCH
• COCKTAIL LOUNGI • e LAlE SUPPER.
DINING
OCEANFRONT DINING,
ATOP TOWERS WING Of
SURF And SAND HOTEL
11'1 SOUTH COAST MIGNWAY LAGUNA 11!.ACH. C.AltFGllNIA
ARTISTIC BA YSIDI: DINING • • •
-41~ '"""""' ~)' NEWPORT'S FINEST SEAFOOD CUISl~E
Lunch-11-5 Dinner 5-12 CocktaU1
-Valot Porklot -
630 E. Udo Park Dr., N.B. -675-0100
NOW OPEN
lilmBJBY -AIRPORT
COSTA MESA -ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT
1262 PALISADES ROAD 17141 546-1390
MN. thru Sat. 11 a.m.•2 o.m-S1111tl'ay 4p.m.•12 p.m.
f•11turing the seme world.lamoui menu & loung•
enjoyed by millions for thirty.one yeers et the
There are variations to this ge51€fat method or
preparation, naturally, and many other ' equally
delicious \vays to cook and serve the bird. Out 'n'
abouter har1 been busy in recent months compiling a
rerom.mended list. .
PICK YOUR SPOT
Try any or all of these restaurants if your
enthusiasm for duck runs as high as ours.
Regardless of the way it's offered, the.bird in each
instance insures moments of superb dining
pleasure. .
{ii. ~
Chez Gerard French Restaurants -Bristol at
Randolph in Costa Mesa and on Broad,vay in
Laguna Beach. Both locations serve superb roast
duckling, sauce a I' orange.
Bob Burns -Fashion Island, Newport Center.
Newport Beach. You can't go wrong with their roast
Long Island duckling, sauce bigarade, \Vild rice.
Newporter Inn -Jamboree Road, Newport
Beach. Once one has had their roast Long Island
ducking a I' orange, Montmorency, \Vild rice, one is
apt to overlook the Inn's myriad other enticing en-
trees. Don't fall into this trap!
Riviera Restaurant -South Coast Plaza,
Costa Mesa. Still another \vinner with ducklinf a I'
orange, but flambe with Cointreau. Heady stuf this.
to both sight and taste.
Sheraton-Beach Inn, Caribe Room -Coast
Highu.1ay, Huntington Beach. It's tempting to repeat
time and again the Inn 's always palatable roast
Long Island duckling, with apple raisin dressing.
White Horse Inn -Newport Blvd .. N.ewport
Beach. Otte doesn't have to have English blood to
become an anglophile with their zes ty roast duckl·
ing and red cabbage, served flaming.
Francois' -Beach Blvd .• Huntington Beach.
It's flaming duck (for two ) here. A whole Long
Island duck, roasted to a gol den brown, then flamed
at your table with selected liquors. Also candied
NOW APPEARING • • •
RENOWNEO
CAUS~Y TRIO
fe1tu r,in9
VOCAL STYLINGS
ly
JOSIE •nd tho
Piano Arti1try of
CHARLIE
Nitely Except Mond1y
·~
" "
For Reserv1tion -C1ll 675-0470
Supren1el11 Beautiful
·~
IN
THE LIDO LOUNGE
LOU NORRIS FOUR
1:30 P.M.-1 :30 A.M.
MONDAT THRU SATURDAY
BILL McCLURE DUO
ALTERNATING WITH
llLL FRIML DUO
DAILT: 5 to l :lO P.M.
. v
s'veet potatoes, wild rice and an orange sauce.
Guy Fawkes -Brookhurst St., Fountain
\'alley, Worth a special trip just to try their
Bridgewater duckling -roast young duck with spic-
ed cooked· fruits, bro,vn rice and sauce bigarade.
KEEP US POSTED
Now try as we may, we can't make it
e\·ery\vhere without finding more time to cover the
territory. Some worthy establishments may have
been overlooked. If your favorite entrant in the duck
derby wasn't listed, let us know.
Villa Nova
Say "ItaJy" today and the average American
\Vill almost immediately think of food. A very good
sign of just how popular that sunny Mediterranean
land's cooking has become in this country.
Perhaps first thoughts bring to mind some of
the savory dishes themselves -cannelloni, scarftpi,
ravioli, lasagna, scaloppini. fettucine, Jinguini
gnocchi, polio cacciatora.
Or maybe they hit upon the spices and other
ingredients so indispensable in the preparation -
tasty olive oil, pungent garlic, red ri pe tomatoes,
subtle mushrooms, piquant cheese, a pinch o(
oregano.
But no matter where the contemplation starts,
it all leads to complete infatuation with the products
of Italy's kitchens. And lovers of Italian cuisine can
sa tisfy every food desire at the delightful Villa
Nova in Newport Beach.
OLO FAVORITE
A long-time favorite in its former stand on
Hollywood 's Sunset Strip before moving to Newport
Continued on Page 26
"Where It's Happening!"
___ _;•;::ll::L.,;M;::A;::R:;,;TIN.I COCl<lAIL LOUNGE
130 I. 17tfl COSTA MISA
Bill M•rtini
Presents
WAYNE
AND
DEAN
TRIO
For Your Dancing and Uslening Pleasure
Dining with An Ocean View
SEAFOOD, STEAKS AND GOURMET ENTRW
* * * * FROM $3.25 * ---
Th• Jim Murphy Dua
l:Jt '9 1 :JI
T11e1. thru S•t.
l lt Or1an Jama,orH
Sund•y, Juite 22, 2 t• 2
BANQUET FACILITIES
AVAILABLE
PHONI IJl-2115
JIJ OCIAN AYE.
HUNTIN•TON llACH
Songwriter-Songstress
Kate Porter
And Her Guitar
Luncheon 11 :30-4 Mon. thru Sat.
D!nner From 5 Dally
Sunday Brunch 11 - 2
3333 W. COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH •42-4291
DON JOSE'
_,......,,. .... 11-
Th• Exciting
SANDRA ALEXANDER DUO
DANCING
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
11 to Z P.M.
ENCHl!.ADA & TACO ......... $1.30
CHIU RELLENO·ENCHILADA .. $1.45
• --------------------·
: ~~D:M:L:Y:":L:O:T~~~~~~~:Fri:d>Y::·:J':":27::·:1'16::;9,\;"""""'""'""'""'""'"'",...,..""'°""""'""'=:: ..... 1:,,.,.,.,.. ..... "'!"'""'.,."""""'=a.., .. .., .......... m:! .. .,. .... ..., .. ,.. ...... c:.,.,..,""'.:z: .... ,
'--OU ·T 'N ABOUT ..
f
I
!
SWISS CHALET
TI1e Ultimate ln Family Dining
1'he Place Wbere Businessmen
Enjoy Lunch
Fri. & Sat. Nigtit Enjoy
Beautiful Organ Music
\ For Reservations C11ll ~5383
414 N. NEWPORT BLVD., N.B.
Clo•od Sund•y Opon 11 A.M. • 10 P.M.
VILLA ROMA
Speclalldl!I la ltolla11 Dinners
HAYING A PARTY,
A GATHERI NG OR
FAMILY DINNER?
Our 1t•nd•rd ipeci•I speghetti dinner consiit1 of cur
delic ious meat sauce end meet bells, topped with im·
ported permes•n chee1e, end include1 our dtlicious
garlic toe1t.
N• dl1h11 to w11h with our dhpo11b!1 1luminull'I ~011!1i11111.
Nulltbef ef 411...,. eM ,,1c-Te t• "'Y·
100 -$14S.OO 6 -S•.70
50 -72.50 4 -S.10 2s -l•.oo 2 -2.•o
10 -14.50 1 -1.45
4-45 North Newport Boulevard, Newport 8e1ch
Open 4 p.m. · 12 p.m. Ml 6-4929 O pen 1 01ys
ll}Jitr
]{nr.ar
111111
NOW • • •
7 Nlgltts a Week
Dancing and
Entertainment
Sunday - 6 p.m. to 2 a.m.
AND
Monday-8:30 p.m. to 2 a.m.
THE HERE AND NOW
SILER BROS.
Tuesday thru Saturday
8:30 p.m. - 2 a.m.
MICKEY & KURT
SUNDAY & MONDAY NITES
SPECIAL
PRIME RIB . . • • • . S2.95
3295 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach
673 -1374
WEEKENDER
Contlnutd from Page 25
about two years ago, this restaurant seems to have
lost nothing and gained considerable in the move.
Further, anyone as tardy as we've been in getting
to the local edition will , like us, quickly realize too
m uch time has been wasted.
For whatever reason it took another all·loo-
soon birthday and a special dinner tteat to set up
out in' abouters initial visit here, it must be said it
wasn't soon enough. And now that we're in Jack
Benny's age bi;-acket. much Jess Lhan a year is
going to pass before the next call.
WHAT A SPOT!
Owners Allen and Charlotte Dale have created
an extraordinarily worthy successor to their Sunset
Blvd. enterprise. In addition to the sections that
provide a commanding view of the bay, there's a
whole series of cozy little areas that oiler a perfect
setting for warm. friendly and intimate dining.
Regardless of the location you settle into -
they are all comfortable and relaxing -be pre-
pared for a menu that offers unlimited possibilities.
In the pasla department along there are more than
two dozen enticing prosp!cts , and double that nwn-
ber of sea food and broiler entrees and ViUa Nova
specialita a la carta.
~
OUR CHOICE
It wa s Crom the first and last categories respec-
tively that we ultimately selected fettucine Alfredo,
$3, and cannelloni Romano, $3.25. We've partaken
of the fettucine at its ori~inal shrine -far-famed
Alfredo's of Rome -and that at the Villa Nova
must be hailed as an equal on every count.
The cannelloni likewise stands the test of any
comparison. Delicious doesn't say enough for this
large tubular macaroni stuffed with chicken and
served with fresh tomatoes, chopped fresh mush-
MIKE JORDAN DUO
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
JAN & PAUL
THE IREllTEST
ENTERTlllNMENT
VllbUE
IN THE U.S.ll.
TONIGHT
c1f:.ty J'm,. -.. ..
REVUE: PHASE II
starring
BLACK/WHITE & 14
SenS1llon1l-S~ bk'• newe.t hit
STEWIE STONE
Hip Young Comedl111 direct from NewYotk
JEANINE NAPOLEON
Supet ~ongstrNs-Wesl coast debUt
with
IUD CROSS., tt11 ~
Codttal1s-Dancing
RE!IERVATIONS1 (714) 772•7777
SHOWTIMES 9 100 AND 11100 P.M .. 'T\JllS...SAT.·
SUNDAY AT 9'00
GRAND HOTEL
rooms, celery and olives and topped with melted
Parmesan cheese. ,
To mention only a few or the tempting-dishes
first-time diners might want to considtir here, we
noted the following items while scanning the menu.
OTHER TEMPTERS·
By way of pai;:ta there's spaghetti casalinga,
$2.25; homemade ravioli stuffed with meat, cheese
and spinach, in tomato sauce, $2.75 : linguini alle
vongole, white clam or tomato sauce, $3; taglier·
ini chicken livers alla Abruzzi, $3.25; salcicce and
peppers, $3. Served on the dinner, 75 cents extra,
they include soup or salad, dessert and beverage.
A LA CARTE
Other a la carte speeialties include lasagna al
Corno , $3.25; polio aUa Paesana, $3.75: scaloppini
cacciatora, $3.95; vilello Castellana, M.50. Sea food
entrees are cannelloni Del Mar, $3.50; Scampi Quo
Vadill, $4 .25; lobster Parmigiana, $5.
•
All of these served on the dinner. $1 extra, tn4
elude soup or salad , spaghetti, dessert .and bever-
age.
Likely selections from the broiler, served with
c hoice o! soup or Villa Nova salad, are broiled half
chicken, Italian style, $3.75; pork chops, $4 ; broil-
ed lobster, $5: filet mignon, $5.95: bistecca Pizzai-
loa with tomato sauce and melted cheese, $6.50.
COOKED TO ORDER
Special mention should be made that no dish is
pre-cooked. Each order is prepared as placed and
the additional time required to render this service
1nore than pays off in quality and flavor.
Also, the service is exceptional with efficient
and courteous waiters displaying every hallmark
of professionalism.
Located at 3131 Coast Highway, Newport Beach,
lhe Villa Nova is open from 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. daily,
with dinner served witil 1:30 a.m. Reservations are
suggested.
ENTERTAINMENT
IN THE
LOUNGE
FEATURING
MARY LOU
TUii. THIU SAT.
PIANO.VOCAL
STYLIST
JOSEF'S
DIXIELAND
BAND
EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON
FROM S:OO to 7:00 P.M.
CAL ROSS TRIO • • . 9 p.m. to Clot! ..
e LUN CHEON e DINNER e LATE SUPPER
e SUNDAY BRUNCH e
2121 E. COAST HIGHWAY
AT THE JAMAICA INN 673-lllO
~
\Ve Get Letter~
Following the recent 25th anniversary celebra-
tion of D-Oay at Costa Mesa's Saucy Swan, which
featured a "miniature" Scottish bagpipe band com-
petition. Out 'N' About received the follo\Ying letter
from Major C. J . "Peter" Barden1 the event's
guest of honor.
"The Swan must surely be the only spot at
which families can enjoy a pint of mild or bitter
and watch big goings on at the same time. It was
a delighUul day and I wish to thank everyone for
being so kind to me.
.. I was frankly amazed to meet so many Ameri-
cans, Britishers and Canadians who could compare
notes as to our whereabouts on D·Day.
"Robert Scott Allen, Brian and Nita Cameron
were perfect hosts and r wish them every success.
"I btilong to the school which agrees with their
rigid code of restrictions against bad language, free
baby sitting customers, and people '"ho take au and
give nothing to the genuine pub atmosphere. God
bless my second home.
"Best wishes to the Daily Pilol.''
Readers wilt be interested to know that ~fojor
Barde-n, during tht war, wo:s transfered fom. tlie Desert
Rat& to tht personal staff of Lord Louis ~lountbatten,
Commander British Commandos, to train Beach i\fas·
ters for D·Da.y.
He participated in the trip to obtain sand sa1nples
weeks before the landings (he refers to it as "a nice
trip, but if one .shot were fired !he whole show toas
blown"), and his Beach Masters are now an important
part of history.
Also, the Newport BeachJCo.sta /i.tesa Sea Scouts
were on hand, 30 odd strong, for the D·Da11 program
and Ma;or Barden donated $100 to their uni/om out·
fitting fund.
op .. Dolly 11 "·'"·
hloy Yow
lluncltton
WttkdayS
llinntr
served in the
GrQJJd Manner
•
$71 S. MAIN, ORANGB
....,._, S42.-3S9S
(a...d Sunday)
CONTINENTAL •1" 'J°'l.!I .ll CUISINE 1U V .i:..1'\>M.
1' ft£5TAUftANT A.n.tfc 16tti c-t1ry
lllfillli hc•r Continental Cuisine
~~~~~~=~~~~'.:~ii!=:~~~1i LUNCHEON e DINNH Cocktail• Servtng
COCKTAILS Luncheon and Dinner
Open to the Public
Newly Enlarged
Popular .. :
LARK
ROOM
Entert•inment Nightly Tue1d•y through S1turd•y
THE FA BULOUS
DICK SEAN
• BANQUET FACILITIES FOR 450
• SERVING LUNCH AND DINNER DAILY
MEADOWLARK
country club
~OMEll SIMS. CECI~ HOLLINGSWOllTH, c •. o .... "''.
1'71J eRAHAM STRm HUNTlNeTON llACH
For R1Hrv1tion1 Call 14'-1116 or 146-1416
"
17171 lrookh11rst Strfft !fonday throug h Salurday.
Fountain Valley Closed Sunctaus
na: 962~6625 Open for l~~~~~~~~~~,[I Private Partica Only If We ire located nellt to
TAKE IN
A MOVIE
THIS WEEKEND
th1 Mey Co. in South
Co1it Pl111.
JJJJ s. l rbt1l
Coste Mew 140·3140
GENERAL YEN'S
CHINESE FOOD
SPECIAL OFFER •••
0N1 1onu oF Free Champa11ne
WITH EACH DINNER ORDER OF $100R MOREi
-Off1r Good Throu9h July 11th-
Suo.•Tllors. ll :l0.10:00 ; F•l.-Sot. ll:l0-1 2:00
1500 ADAMS I at Harbor I
COSTA MESA 540-1937
Real
Cantonese Food
e1t here or
take hom1.
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
111 2ht pl., Newport Beoch ORiol• 3-9560 o,.. , .......... hffy 12·12 -Fri. 11114 Set. 'tll J e ....
FLING ~
INTIRTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEU
DANCING * HAP HALL DUO -.tilt~-· .............
n.r. ""' s.-.
R••r-Mt•• Th11t1r S:,Ji:E Costa Mel•
141 L lttli If, Jd .ft Nw11.rt Ifft.
~ -~ ,,..,, ......... .,..,,.. °""' • ··""" ... '·'"· Diiiy
HUNTINGTON BEACH
TOWN & COUNTRY
11552 B11ch Blvd. 962-5912
CHILD'S PORTION HALF Plltf (Children undtt 12)
PHONE IN ••• ALL ITEMS AVAILABLE TO TAKE OUT
FOR ADVERTISING IN
Tblnlt of hlsh c:lilh
overlooking tho
Pacll!c -of beautilul
French garden&
ood golden be.aches.
Think of Victor Hugo
Im! -oo unforgottabla
letting for
dining pleuures.
Cliff Drln at Coatt HlslnvaJ'
Lq:una Beach-tN-N17'
opa for
LUDCbeon. Dirulu, Cocktallt
THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 A ~Rnto"Uttutt
Bi]]ingsley's
GOLDEN BULL
RESTAURANT
STEAKS -PRIM~ RIB -SEAFOOD -COCKTAILS
INCIDENTALS
S silows nightly
Wed.·Sat. at l:lO
, .. turl"I
WENDY MOORE ...
LARRY REID
TERRY THOMAS
DANCING
in the
Garden Room
JMt off the Santa Ana Freeway 'et El Toro Ro.cl -Phowe 830~0440
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : { S\ (j/~-f$11Jd ~ C.aribe Room :
• ~ PRESENTS • • • • • • • • • • • • •
ENTERTAINMENT -DANCING a
PEDRO ALY AREZ "
REFRESHING INTERNATIONAL SOUNDS
o I
LOS FABULOSOS PATOJOS
• • • • • • • • • a 21112 OCEAN AYE. ICoast Hwy.J-4!UNTIN<PTON IEACH-Sl6·1421 a , ..........................•......
-••£ I I• FG llS,
WITM YOUlf,l,IHG HOT"rlltl f
N•wport 8oadl, Costa M ... aod oow H•ollnv""' leaclo or--
N•wport loadl ood C... M ... Call 646-713', 17 .. & T-
For "• now Nunth•JIOll leaclo, Call 147·1214, loac1I & Hen -
Hear the Refresh ing New Sound of
THE JOP.LIN fORTE
MONDAY • THURSDAY 8:30 p.m. to 1 :30 a.m.
SUNDAY-5 • 9 p.m.
151 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
i
In Galleries
Harbor Museum
Show in Finale
CRAWS GALERY -1:!90 S. Coa.t !Ugbway; Laguna -
Beacb. Houra : 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. On exhibit now
through July 2, recent watercolors and oU paintings by Rei
Brandt of Newport Beach.
LAOVNA ART GALLERY -307 Cliff Drive. Laguna
Beach. Admission 50 cents. Members and one gueat free.
Hours: Mon-Sat. noon to 5 p.m.; Sun. 1-5 p.m.
MARINER'S WR.ARY -2005 Dover Drive, Newport
Beach. On exhibit, lhrough June, in the Jr. Ebell Ex·
hibit during regular library hours, watercolor and oil paint-
ings by Genie Davis.
NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive,
Newport Beach/ Currently on uhibit through June, during
regular businesS hours marine oil paintings by Gerald Loring.
COFFEE GARDEN GALLE RY -2615 E. Cnast High-
way. Corona de! Mar. Hours 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Mon.-
Sat No admission charge. On exhibit through Aug. 22 paint..
ings by Ruth Osgood and pottery by Jack Taylor.
MUTUAL SAVINGS -2867 E. Coast Highway, Corona
de! Mar. On exhibit through June, 1titchery and oil paintings
by Phillis Bicl. Open during regular business hours.
NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -400 Main St.,
Balboa. Open Wed .• Sun. t to 5 p.m. Mond11y t -9 p.m.
Currently on exhibit art of seven Southern California artlJts
exploring new materialll and ideas in a show lilied "The Ap-
pearing/Disappearing -Image/Object. Through June 23.
MESA VERDE UBRARY-296i Mesa Verde Drive East,
Cost.a Mf'sa. Currtntly on exhibit during regular library
hours, through June, the art ol Lois Linder.
COSTA MESA LIBRARY -586 Center St., Costa Mesa.
On exhlblt during regular library hours, through June, oil
paintings by Pat Ingram; hand painted china by Beth Gib-
bons.
C.M. ART LEAGUE -Members ol the Costa Mesa Art
League, $13 Center St., Costa Mesa. Hours: ;)at. and Sun.
t to 5 p.m. Continuous exhibit of art work in various media
by Art League members. No admiss!on ch:irge.
SO. CAUF. FIRST NA1'L BANK -11122 Beach Blvd.,
Huntington Beach. On exhibit d\Uing regular business hours,
through July 25, paintings by Rheta Gillette.
CHARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main St.,
Santa Ana. Hours : Tues. through Sat., 10 a.m. to 4.:30 p.m.;
Sun. l to 5 p.m.; Wed. and Thun. even.Inga, 7 to 9 p.m. No
admission charge. Currently on exhibit juried show of Torana
Art League. painted china by members of Calif. China Paint-
ing Association and old mapis of Orange County. through
June 29.
Marine Bronc Busters
Set for Forces Rodeo
Corporal Bill Jones c.f El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
and Gunnery Sergeant Bill
Hiscock of Camp Pendletvn
are expected to fight it out for
top Marine Corps b r o n c
busting honors at the first an·
nual salute to lhe Armed
Forces Rodeo at Rancllo
California on Friday and
Saturday , July 4 and 5.
Corp. Jones, a 21-year old
from Dodge City, Kansas, edg-
ed out Gunnery Sgt. Hiscock
as All-Around Cowboy of the
Year at the 22nd Annual Camp
Pendleton Rodeo held earlier
this month. Hiscock, wbo cap·
lured the coveted award !'lst
year, will be out vying to lurn
the tables tn his favor at
Rancho Clijil'omia.
Along with winning the
cowboy championship at the
Camp Pendleton Rodeo, Jones
also captured the steer wrestl~
ing and saddle bronc events.
The two marines along with
60 other ("(lmpetltors from
eight ma:rlne corps, naval and
air force installations from
Los Angeles ta San Diego will
participate In the Fourth of
July weekend rodeo at the
ranch arena starting at 1: lS
p.m. each day .
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS •3 Of 1clty V1!sterd1y's Puzzle Solved:
1 Saul's of Europl!
•4 Town In successor Belgium
6 Lecture hall •S Unending
struclure •7 Parties lO
10 Fot fear lh1t 1 duel
14 Place in l 51 Fiii with
. row thln11s
15 Miss 5Z 11a3nlllctnl Maxwell 54 01 a farm-16 Malari1I Ing Job
type fe ver 58 Employee in
17 Fl11ures' rad io tubt
tartntr factory
18 eason fot 59 Love. 6/Z7/69 1 clothes personfitd brush 61 Father of 7 Sprang down 37 Opt ica l 19 Blood Ivan II: 8 NegaUvt device
Vt SS ti 2 wotds phrase: 39 lllfl lllry ZO Ctilrplng 6Z Go o~r Z words . .,
notes documents ' Infuse •O Act kept 2Z Visltots to 63 Rapid water thoroughly for an a country r.urrent 10 Effusive l!Xtfl period 24 Unruly M TWlllrd 11 Cast out •Z St t at art assemblage fabr ic lZ lllusl,11 wcit angle 26 Ont put ln bS Does wroo11 13 Not relaxed 43 One who ch1rge 66 Flreann 21 Inebriate faces lacts Z7 BtU or dlsch1r9e Z3 Kind of •4 Plies up Ed ison 67 Met ting footb1ll 46 Household 31 Wood which g''' impltrntnl
Is too~h DOW~ 25 pttl 47 Exempt a11d • astlc l oUt or
Z7 Colored •a Agog JZ Mak ing a flu Ids •9 Weather• ... one's mind Z8 "Thal's a m1n's word 33 Direction 2 "There --/": 50 Feminine 35 Female: ought to be 2 words n1mt lnfotrnal --·!": 29 Instrument 53 Mentall,. 38 Ollllcult 2 words 30 "•rch dlsordtftd j grobltfll· 3 Moral 3• Btfore the ·55 Cautious 39 akery corrurtlott li me that 56 Profession product 4 Ltga shire 35 Anrmals mtn: Abbr. 40 Free from ln ·soinethlng la ken In 57 What Ol'lt Infirmity 5 Un1vold1ble hunting eats •t Sun lot 36 lord of 60 Plact with •z Sta margin 6 St1te: Abbr. Clrt
' • • 1
•
Joan Baez w i 11
heard in concerl at An-
aheim Convention Cen-
ter, Saturday, June 28,
at 8;30 p.m. All tickets
are $2.
'Krakatoa'
Uses Magic
For Setting
The sleepy Spanish fishing
par( of Denis was turned Into
a bustling replica of the
British Crown Colony of Sing·
apore In the 1880's for Cin·
erama's "Krakatoa, East of
Java," now in its American
premiere at the Clnefama
Dome, in Los Angeles.
The transformation w as
made by production designer
Eugene Lourie who dlacov-
ered in the area a tiny one
motor track locomotive made
Jn England in 1881, an au-
th entic Chinese .junk which
had been sailed to Spain by an adventurous business man
from Ba~elona, and plenty of
palm and rattan matting fol'
disguising the sheds along
the dock. The castin~ de-
partment chipped in with 300
Oriental extras, drawn from
the population of nearby Va-
lencia.
Even the local fishing boats
were modified 1o conform
with their Oriental counter·
parts. Stars Maximilian
Schell, Brian Keith, Barbara
Werle, Diane Baker, John
Leyton, Sal Mineo and Ros·
sano Brazzi, were also on
hand In period costumes
aboard the Batavia Queen. a
JOO-year-old vessel refitted
and used as an integral part
of the picture. It. was the larg-
est ship ever to be docked at
Deni a . I I
Tom Jones
And Friends
The Friends of Distinction,
popular rock group, have been
engaged to appear with Tom
Jones at the Greek Theatre
for the season's premiere on
Monday, July 7.
Friday, Ju11t '11. 1969
JACK LIMMON CATHIRIN• OINIUYa
'THE APfllL FOOLS'
plus co-hit• STEVE Mc QUEEN
"THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR"
"Aprll fools" shown 8:30 • 12115 •"Crown Affair" 11>130
Completl show <n /otl ot 10130.P'.M.
HARBOR BLVD. DRIVE-IN
HAfl•Olt •lVD. •ETWllN IAN DllQO
ANO GAflDlH GllOVl fltl:EWAt•
---PRfMIERE SHOWING! ---
otlOOIY PICIC • OM.U. SMAii' • JUUi NIWMAa
"MACKElfNA'I GOLD"
plu• co-hit "THE SOUTHERN STAR"
"M.oclt ... 11•'1Gold" Showa 1130 • 12.JO • "S.UIMrw ..-11,ao
co .. pl.te lllow •• '°"' .. 11.00 Hl·WAY 39 DRIVE-IN ~~~~:w.:a•
-PREMIERE DRIYE•IN SHOWINOSl-
WALTDISNrrs"THE LOVE BUG",,__..
~w 2...d ,-..,.1IGIT" • A-. to.lly pkt.n Ir! "'-rl
"l.Ovt: MIO"' ote.30612 MWr11eJii •"Gil" ot lo.30 P.M.
COl!lpltite ...._ • r.t. • lo.30 P.M.
• . ............... ~
Sii HI-Ill'
THAT YllT LO~AIU IUe
0... JOMI -lddy H ... ett
IN WALT DISNIY'S
"THE LOVE BUG"
PLUS
"GIT'' .............. ,, ......... ....
IXCLUSIVI IN•A•IMlNT
Jock i...-.1 -httir LArwf9"I "THE APRIL FOOLS"
Stww Mc9""9 -P.,. Dww.,
"THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR"
RICOMMINDID POI ADULTS
............. ~············· nn. ~
DCl.UllYI INeA•IMINT
Ol'Mf ,._,, -J..t '91-.
11CHE I"
PLUS
...... SNwert -0... ,..,..
"BANDOLERO"
, ........ !19 ••• __., •••••••• ~···· ............. ...,
• $175 "Fls~~j~,;.• ~I "for A Pow -·CJ P!l Doll1rt Mo,.,..
CARLOAD bc.o-•••• hr ...,,. •
The group, comprising Har·
ry Elston, Floyd Butler, Jes-
sica Cleaves, and Barbara
Jean Love, will aid and abet
Tom Jones throughout that
week, ending Sunday, July 13. I;=:;;::::;:::::
Friends of Distinction first
won local acclaim when they
entertained at the Daisy and
subsequently at the Factory
and the Hilton.
Gloomy Gus is Your Kinda Guy
EVERY FATHER'S DAUGHTER
IS A VIRGIN!
YOU MUST SIE
THE ORANGE COUNTY
PREMIERE
PRESENTATION
of
"GOODBYE,
COLUMBUS"
A Film from the
Novella by
PHILIP ROTH
the author of the
Now Bost Soller
., .. "Partnoy's
• !i'i,.;o.. · Camplalnt"
• What tvtr your age you will tnfoy the acting of &.nfamin and the 1tun-
nln9 movle debut of All McGr11w, tht fr1nknn1 of tit.fr l1n9uap 11nd
lht tender •nd '"""' rolotlonshlp botwMn tho ,__
"GENUINELY INT!MATE LOVE SCENES" ·...:;:..
"REFRESHING TO SEE" ~: ...
"MEMORABLE" ':=::' "IRRESISTIBLE"
•
i J!I CAIL Y PllOT F'rldq, Jur1e 17, 1969
• I
r
I
i
For Advtrtl.tn1 In
The Weekender
Phone 642.-4321
A e llAT MUSICAL COM IOY
ortNS 1FRIDAY
"TiiE THREE PENNY OPERA"
" BERTOL T BRECHT
3 Winner
~yAwards
BEST ACTRESS -Katha rine Hepburn
WINN£JI -"BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR !"
- -""' I ~<n C:"t"t A•"d
JCS€ftl UiW'lf-N<i IKOf.\llolJS'f.fll.M
PEreR ~ KATHARINE
OTOOL€ ;rn HEPBURN
'""""""' 1H€ UON IN WINTER ~!:;;":"i:'='
ll1SlMll SU.TS NOW AT Bill OFllCE 01 BY IWL!
IXCUISM OUllCE Tl<-.... "' •i s... c.~....i. 1i1 .. 1c c.. ,,, s.. llill sr. COUNTY ftS(IYCll .,, ~1 ,,.lt1 .,._In!"""• Att• e... 2J.MJ7-U41 SEAT [JIUl[Ef ff 114·711 .. llllt IOI ,.. MHnl •llllall Ol!l<r lor.lliM,
Show Times: L&e/(/ s CENJUHY 21 2 Shows Today
2:00 p.m., 1 :30 p.m. •1••· OICUllM.·-·l71't ff2
ALS A T UA 4-STAR THEATRE, LOS ANGELES
BALBOA
673"4048
OP!N
•:i $
'"'· "'"' .. IMa Ptnlnaut.
·-·· ~ GEORGE JEAN
PEPPARD SEBERG
NOW SHOWING
Sidn•y Poitier In
"FOR LOVE OF IVY"
ALSO PLAYING IS THE llG COMEDY FEATURE
THE TWO GIAHTS
OF COMEDY,
SNOW YOU HOW TO
COMMIT MARRIAGE.
Bea ~·JACltD GLEASON
JUIEWTNAN
~ ..... TOa.ooTJUUI~ r.;;i
1!DlllWJJ' CAC i!!J
l'l~IT U ACll -.. tM •~"•~ l•HI-U4. lolo -(II, S·l lSO
Eic.l•1iff htlloor Showh•t
Mid·S.•tllwi Colifonll•
Jack Lemmon .,,
C1therine Oeneuve °""" • .,..., -f'ettt l•Wf•~ Myr111 ltf
hi • ••••tk h •ta y
"THE APRIL FOOLS"
W~fttJ •t:U
c.tllwew Stt, •~ •-•Y fi"fMl1• ... 111. Mnll•-· ..... •11111 ,.,,.,., .....,.. ..... (~041rittt ,k
~, •• 11 .... ,
,.,..... .... CllllllNll ,,,
NOW
PLAYING
,. -· ....... ~------~---------------------------------------------
You r Guid e t o Movies THI MOTION PICTURE
CODE ,AND RATINCi
PROCORAM
~ 'Love Bug' Rated for All Th• Mo•ion Plcl11r• Cod~ •nd
R1 tln9 Ad111lnf,l1•floh •pplr1J
th• fo llow/119 f1ti1191 lo film•
di1tribul1d ln th• U.S.A. Pie•
t11r•• 1•t•d 6 , t.4 or \R q11•lify
No One Under 16 Admltt ..
All Se•ta 1.50
1'0t\lll:T MElll
!Editor'• Note: Th t'
movie auide ii prepared
by th e fUmi-committee oJ
IJarbor CouncU YI'A. Mrs.
John Clark i$ president
at1d Mrs. Ilare Sweeney
ts committee chairman. It
is inteM.ed as a reference
in determitiing suitable
films Jor ceria;n a g e
aroups and wUl appear
weekly. Your views m-e
solicited. Mail them to Mo-
vie Guide, care of th«
DA ILY PILOT.I
• * •
ADULTS
BuoDa Sera. Mn. Campbell
(Ml: A U.S. Air Force· squa·
dron returns for .a reunion
to an Italian town they oc·
cupied 20 yea rs previously. An
enterprising matron tries to
cope with three veterans each
of whom believes he is the
falher of her daughter Gina
Lollobr igida, Janet Margolin.
Peter Lawford.
MYRNA LOY
An Ageless Star
No Old Bag
Roles for
Myrna Lo y
"( wi ll not," she says wjth
intensity, "play old bags."
The "she" is Myrna Loy, for
years a major force in
Hollywood's hierarchy. and a
nostalg.ic reminder of what
aficionados term the "Golden
Years'!. of the movies. Those
years, however, have tarnish-
ed, and as styles in film mak-
ing changed and the era or
dignity and style in motion
pictures v a n i s h e d into
memory, so· did many leading
actors and actresses.
"[ have never left the
screen," Miss Loy explains,
despite the fact I.hat Cinema
Center Films' romantic fan·
tasy, "The April Fools." at the
Lido Theater. Newport Beach,
and the tlarbor Drive·ln in
Sanla Ana, is her first film in
eight years. "I just didn 't like
the roles that were submilted
to me," says Myrna.
"I didn 't like the roles \hat
were submitted to me," f\.Uss
Loy repeated. "They y,·ere
creeps. like Joan and Bette
were playing, so I kept firing
the scripts right back . Then.
with a pause, she sums up her
self.imposed exile from the
screen: "I'm not a creep."
In "The April Fools,'" a
comedy with a definite point
of view about life and love in
Lil<' 20111 century. her role is an
ex.tension of the \II i t t y ,
sophisticated comedies that
marked her appearances with
Will iam Powell in the classic
"Thin Man" series. She plays
a swinging, jet-set matron,
with Charles Boyer as her
husband who is a never·say-
die romantic, still madly in
Jove with her even after 30
years of marriage.
Candy IR): Adap tation of
the unl.nhiblted sex-crammed
novel aboul a baby.faced
teenager who yields to a Jong
succession of lovers. Ewa
Aulin,
Che (~1): Story of Che
Guevara, Latin A m e r i c a n
revolutionary. Omar Sharif
and Jack Palance star.
A FlsUuJ of Dollars (M): An
ltalian·made, English dubbed,
American western about a
loner with no name. Clint
Eastwood.
For a Few Dollara More
.(MJ : A violent story about a
man who shoots or stabs any
criminals with a bounty on
their hea ds. Clint Eastwood.
Goodbye Columbu s (R I: A
summer romance between a
poor librarian and a nouveau
riche college girl lapses due to
their different views. A sat'ire
on sex. Richard Benj amin, Ali
MacG raw.
mtllionalre whom she suspects
of maste rm inding a bank rob·
bery.
MATURE TEENS
AND ADULTS
Tbe April Fool• ( M I :
Hilarious and romantic lan-
tasy about a married man who
meets somebody else's wHe.
Jack Lemmon, Catherine De·
neuve star.
BANDOLERO: Post· clvH
war western in which two
outlaw brothers, played by
James Stewart and Dean
Martin, join forces with the
sheriff when the posse pursu-
ing them is attacked by
savage Mexican bandidos. Ra·
quel Welch stars in this violent
film wiU1 a background of line
desert scenery.
working in the Munich 7.oo,
begins a l)undred miJe walk
with four companions and a
~riie elephant. This adventure
~ry af!inns hwnan values
ti h a t can surmount t h e
brutalities of war. Oliver Reed
and MichaeJ Pollard.
How To Co mmit Marriage
(l.I ) : Bob Hope and Jackie
Gleason portray two pro-
spective fathers·in·law who try
to prevenl the marriage of
their children. Jane Wyman
and Tina Louise.
Lion in Win ter (M): Clash of
two strong·willed monarchs,
King Henry II of England and
his queen, Eleanor of Aqui·
talne, makes a brilliant, ex·
plosive drama out 0 r
J'rag1nenls of 12th century
history. Peter O'Toole and
Katharine Hepburn.
Pendulum (Ml : An engross·
ing, suspense thriller in which
a police captain who resents
for th• Cod• 5••L _.
Pictur11 ••ltd X do not ,...,,;.,.
1 S••L Th• r•llr19a •pply to
pict111t1 ••l•1••d •ft•• Novtm•
b•r I, 1961. Pichu·•• rtlt11M
b•foro lh1t d•I• •t• d11crib-
•d '' P'•"i•u•ly I fiD
•nd/or SMljl.
(g}.:_Su419•1'•d lor GEHl lAL
•udl•nc•1,
1MJ-Su9t11ted for MATUIE
•udi4lnc•1 IP.r1nlt l di1.
cr1flon •dYil•dl.
(B]-IESTllCTED -P•rson•
und•r 16 not •dmiti•d,
unltn 1ccomp1ni•il by
~1r1nt or 41.Jii!t 9u11d· ••n.
@-Pmclllf. ""*" I' 11ot
oll'"htff, Thi1 191 ••· 1lriction m1y b• lli9k4lr
in c•rlt in •••••-Chtt lr. th1•I•• or •dYtrli1in9.
ESSY PERSSON
Tn. To~el Fenial• Arumalt
TIME S ~ "Wo-1t"-l~I S eltd t :40
"Cor'"en'"-t:OS Only
No OH Under 16 All'"lttff
All SEATS $1 .50
McKenna's Gold (M ): Story
about a group of men and
women who share a fear of
rampaging Apaches and a
greed for gold. Gregory Peck,
Omar Sharif.
The Boston Straagler: This
film traces the events leading
to th e arrest of the psychotic.
who has never been tried for
the mutilation and murder of
13 women. The probe of a
diseased personality follows.
Tony Curtis and Henry Fonda.
the acquittal of a rapist-murd-1'=:;=:=:==:=::=:=:=:=~:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~01 er er on legal technicalities, I
finds himself chief suspect in
The Thomas Crown .Afrair:
Faye DunaWay and Steve
McQueen star in t h i s
sophisticated fi lm about a
cra!:k insurance sleuth. She
becomes an intimate com-
panion of a thrill·seeking
For Love of Jvy: Romanlic
comedy in whlctt t w o
teenagers set up a dale for
their housekeeper in order to
keep her from leaving the
household. Sidney Piotier and
Abbey Lincoln.
Hannibal Brook! (M ): An
English prisoner of war, after
a double murder. George Pep-
pard and Richard Kiley.
TEENS AND ADULTS
Barefoot In The Park:
Beguiling story about the first
few weeks of newly wed life in
a Greenwich Village wa lk·up
apartment. Jane Fonda.
Funny Girl (GJ: Lavish
musical presentation of the
life of Fanny Brice, the child
of lhe slums who became a
great comic s t a r. Barbara
Streisand, Omar Sharif. Walt·
er Pidgeon.
FAM fLY
Ex-News Photographer
Makes His Own Movie Finia.o's Rainbow : F 11 m Tichll .,. 111t 11 s.. c1111or.11 Mullc co. 6J1 So lllll St. AU M\<111111 T1cht At:tll(IH 11'-""' tad1113-f.Zl·I HI) or 1 ll·l7t~l~ for JOut .,_lletl Mut""I Ol!kt lllelllOll) version of the Broadway
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -He's
black. His name is Gordon
Parks. He is producing, direc·
li ng, sco ring and appearing
in his own screenplay taken
from his biographica l-novel.
Parks said. musical of an lrisbman who TODAY AT 2 :00 lf~7~~· _,, I
l I th. le r ha I 's rock & 8:30 P.M. • ( niu..ut9. 111~,1, "I was the youngest of IS seas P ec tn c -· ----children _ 7 boys and 3 girls of gold and bu ries it near Fort en.,s.iu11ftf91Ut•IJt.10M ·'"•ki«ntitn c111 111.3~15
-and I want the fi ve others Knox to make it grow. Fredi,-!~=";~:;;;~:=:;?"=~========~~
Parks is 56 and scarred by
countless bloodlettings i n
lights with black and white
men alike.
Inside, however, he appears
to be unmarked by violence.
A one-time. photojournalist for
one of the country's tgp
magazines, Parks has taught
himself to write, rompose and
take pictures.
If he were while he might
be described as the typical
American success story. As
a black, he is someUting more
than that.
He looks at you through
wise, liquid eyes, a dues payer
in the Josers club who has
become a winner on the grand
scale. Almost everything he
does in Hollywood is a first
for a black man -producing
and directing a major motion
picture, for instance.
His "The Learning Tree"
at \Varner Bros. was com-
pleted in less than 10 weeks
and \viii be released in late
summer.
"I've taken on all the work
1 could in the picture to make
sure ii is true to the book
and the spirit of my parents,"
P am Tuck er
Set to Debut
who are still alive to see how Astaire and Petula Clark.
sacred and pure the picture Ice-Station Zebra (Fl: All-
is to our mother and father. male spy drama about a nuclear submarine's trip to
"The film illustrates the the North Pole on a rescue 1
oneness of ma nkind. It's not mission. Rock Hudson. Ernest
a black and white film. It Borgnine, J i m Brown an di
shows both races at their best Patrick ~cGoohan .
and worst. It depicts them The Love Bug (G): Disney
sharing joy and grief comedy abou t a Volkswagen,j
together." with hunlan feelings. that 1
Parks expects no hea l from responds to love w i t h
1
black militants. miracles. Dean Jones stars.
';They'd better not give me Oliver { G ) : Spectacular
troubl e." he said grimly. "If musical version of Dickens"
they do, all I'll ask 'em is classic about an orphaned waif
'where were you when J need· cast into the teeming squalor
ed you during my days in of the lowe r class. He finally
Mississippi and Alabama in escapes to the elegance of the
the 1940s?'" upper class. Ma rk Lesler,
The milita nts came to Parks Jack Wild and Oliver Reed.
not long ago and asked if • * * he'd like to make contact with Tlie letter imtnediately
missing felon E I d r idge after tile title i11dicates tile
Cleaver. rating given the picture by ,
''The militants trust me,'' the 1'1otion Picture Code.II
Parks said. "But I turned The Motior1 Picture Code
them down because if J met And Rating Progra1n may i
Cleave r the government would b~ found cm the motion/
have every right to ask me picture page.
where and when I saw him.I;===========;
And J wouldn't betray him." ... · I
In predominantly w hi t e ,
llollywood Parks finds the col·
or of his skin is wo rking for =-~ 1 him. _
"B lack begins to work for HELO OVER 1
you after you reach a certain Co11th111ou Dally fro'" 1 P·'"·
level in your fie ld." he said . Fred All•i•• ··But a man has to work to "FINIAN 'S RAINBOW"
get there. And in this picture ,'HANNIB ~l.' BROOKS" I try to stay with universal
truths -the things that keptl';::;;;;:;:M~;,;;h~u~l;;J:. ;';;'':'';";;;:;;;;:;ii me secure while I was making I
1 lt. Pam Tucker, Forrest Tuck· d 1. cr 's daughter, has followed "I' tke to think that a SOUTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH
her father into the acling black bigot and a white bigot
ranks and will make her debut could slt side-by·side and
in '·There Was a Crooked watch my pic ture and walk
M " J • h L •1 out hand-in-hand." an . . . . os"p . 11 an·
kicwicz production for Warner In essence, that is Parks '
Bros.·Seven Arts. mess.age:
~1iss Tucker has joined the '"There must not be a vio-
cast headed by Kirk Douglas, lent confrontation of the races
Henry Fonda. Hume Cronyn, in America."
La rgest Selection of
Tropical Fish &
Supplies in the area.
Now 2 LecetfonJ
111W. WIUO", COSTA Ml:SA
A aim or A MOVIE
• • COLUMll" PICTUtll!'8 Mll llllHTI
THE ATRE IBllGR~ClllU I
... .,.or .. •o.u.s. cosu "'u~ -3•6-J•Ol f l CI lllllr ..., .... ..,, ..... _ . ...,,...,'°""'°'-""•o ,.....
Exclusive Premiere , Eng~~~•nt lliCRLliiil•S
"SOUTHERN ~, I DLD -.=
STAR" ''··--:· ~-• -~ I!!! ~
A Film fro'" tile No••ll• by
PHILIP ROTH
Tile A11ttlor ef tltt
Now •~ut S.lltr
l rd WHk
"l'ortnoy's C•111palnt" ''="='=':"'::~~§! N'THi"" WiSTMiNsTE:;:R;;::;,c°''""T'°•~• == -
MATIN EES DAILY
Wlf'd .• fh11 r11.·Fri.-I p.m.
Sot•rdoy-10 o.m,
Sundey-12 Haon
Co11tinwo11S
M ... iftffl Doily
Presents
Wln.nle ... Pboh ""'-'' ond the bflllttll)' de:r
Jechrricolr
• ....... 0 ..... --:
(Except Newport Cinema)
WALT DISNEY
producllons ..... '83: ,.._.
c8J
•
Can Herbie, a clean-living.
hard-working small c.ar
-~--find happiness
• . -·. . in today's
hec tic world?
Warren Oates, Burgess Mere· Parks hopes "The Learning
dith, Lee Grant and ~1ichael Tree" will contribute to that with DEAN JONES e MICHELE LEE
Blodgett. \·_:t~h~es~is:.:::::::============~~l~===~·~·~··~'~"~·~c~·m~~·~"'~·~·~·~ID~T~O~M~L~l~N~SO~N~===~
!aH F•irview Rd,. ~4·1'61
171·G, lllv~r1:de Ot. -N~l'Orl Be1(!1
l bel!lnd 1111: fl'GS! Office I "'4-15.Jol
t-.fankiewiez is producing and
directing the Technicolor-Pan·
avislon film, with C. 0. (Doc)
Erickson as executive produ·
cer.
CONTINUOUS
SHOW DAILY
From 2 P.M.
Departire 9:30 1.m., retll"nlna to the n11inland
S:•S p.m. Also, conv1niant fast motorcruis~ 1f'ld staplene
sertiee to Cltelina.
Tab Htrtlor rreeway to south tnd, then just follow the
signs to Catalina Ttrmrnals. foot of Vincent Thomas Bridge.
""llMll SOUTH COAST FCOST•"'-~"'" ox PLAZA THEATRE CORPDRAHOH San Die&o Freeway 1t Bristol ,. 546-271 1
NOW SHOWING
CONTINUOUS FROM 12:30 P.M.
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT NOON
wnnm.
•
~ WAUot$:>.if ""1r1111 -.·,,,,--,,,
Ake Tiiis 2"4 ,_..,. -
Ample Ptrkfnc. Flt' lrftrlNIU.. "nMmtllu call
C1t.11iu Air /Su Ttntlalll, 547·111t. Onie• Ctnty
,_ $17-"50, "'Alltla lll1tt 71S.314t
Also
Playing
Winnie ... Fl.oh ·
STEVE MtQUEEN -FAYE DUNAWAY
"TH E THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR "
....................
• ' '
llN•ICllft
"i.\TU~Qf,)
e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS
Qu1lity Printin9 •nd Dtptndeblt StrVlct
for mot• than • quarter of • • c•ntury.
1211 WIST 1AUOA ILYL MIWPOIT aACH -14MJ2t
I
. ------.
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
k.'THERiNE', I HA.VE lC \EAVE THE
MOU$E •• AND I HAVEN'T n».e 10
EXPLAIN RIGHT NOW •• BUT n.L IE
&AC.JC AS QUICKLY AS I CAN!
TUMBLEWEEDS
WHAT l>tD HAii\ roro PESERVE
THATBAWUN& our, BEANS I'
Mun AND JEFF
All, JEFF.
GET MY
eAU..I
I
CAN'T
RE'.ACl-I
rT!
' '
.. ~--
WHAT P'YA, MEAN
'HUH•?! SAY WHAT YOU
DID, STUPID!!
r By Al Smith
By Gus Arriola
rrts ClttJOl<#Jf •
\;,,'! 1111\<. • ,,_ __ .;., .. ;,;....... .._...
I
I I
• TELEVISION VIEWS
Sorry, Prince,
Count Me Out
By RICK DU BROW .,
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -I wonder whether Ill<!
Investiture of the Prince of Wales Tuesday strike'(
as minor a response in you aa It does in me. ~
As you may know -or perhaps not, becaUH.
other more pressing matters -this investitiare _
Prince Charles will get considerable, extend ·
satellite coverage on the television networks.
I WISH THE prince well. I saw him In a brief
Interview· on CBS-TV's evening news Tbursdl1 t
night, and thought be ~ame across very nicely; oot
balanced, in fact, that I wondered what be thought
of the international Importance of bis investitv'e.
But be was nice. And I lived and worked in hi'
country for a while, and I'm very fond of It, the wq
any good lmpertallst is about a lovely colony.
And yet -and yet -I really don't think r
going to sit through an awful Joi of the video C1>V:i
age of the Investiture. I think we all have a lot mo
important things to do.
I GUESS I have something of a special Int~"
when it comes to the use of the very ei:penaiv.
satellite coverage. I feel something like a guy w
watches the loss--leaders advertised in a used ~
commercial and wonders when we're going to g•
emphasis on the basic stuff that atfects us all mofef
personally. " I mean, do you remember all the early lntema--
Uonal broadcasts via utelllte coverage. First they.:;
•IW'l'td we could really do It, and then they 3;., I taney; Wuiltratf.ng how It could he done In color, . f
It was great stuff. They bad some of those show
switching from spot to spot arotind the world; .
the suggestion was that now we could bring Iha
human race a litUe closer together -the chi~
significance of television -and the teclmlcal facil·
ity was aweso~e, and is.
WELL, OF COURSE there have since ~
some to!>'notch satellite broadcasts. But· for; the
most part, the use of these awesome itltelli~ pro-
grams has been disappointingly linilted, and one of
the reasons, or excuses, depending on how. you feel
about network profit sheets, ta that setellije"covet•
age costs so much. · :
That being the case, I feel.a' little protectl.V. of
all that money, and I'm concerned with value ,..,.
celved, and I must say I feel a little · like SCr®ge
when I think about spending all lhoee dollan On a
ceremony focusing on the lncreasiligly unimportant
British royalty. I mean, It's not'even the Queen~
I THINK MAYBE I'd rather spend the' oatellite
money for a lengthy live broedcast on bow It Is In
Vietnam for our troops on a typical day, Or ma~
a broadcast· from the Middle East cities Involved
In the lsraell·Arab conflicts. Or maybe ff a new
African nation happened to be having a t<><lo on Ila
flnrt day of existence, I'd like to see that.
No offense, Prince, But It seems to me that, '
once again, Britain bas shown Its remarkable gift
for Impressing ila Importance, out of all proportion,
on the United States. It's a gift, all right, anq maybe
that'! why there'll always be an England.
THE CHANNEL SWIM: Joe Frazier's heal'Y·
weight championship victory over Jerry Quarry-this
week will be seen on ABC-TV's "Wide World of
Sports" Saturday ... Author-political candidate
Normal Mailer I! Interviewed about New Yo'!<
City's mayoralty race on NBC-TV's "Today'' aerieS
next Friday.
Dennis tlae Menace
I .
• I
I
I
l
• • 1 :'! '
~. ---.,,--------·-----·-----
1 _~udden's Gall~ry -1
.1 To Feamre S~~
"Allen Ludden's G111llery'' ville and Danny ~.,.,ius_lhe f
opened for businegs qi a.Mon-: Randy, Sparks Collect\an. : \
'day U\rough Friday '1a>ls at II Although 1the .Back Pore~ I
p.m~ "0!1-ebennel 11, w it b_ _.and Belland-amt-company'
Lladde.n .occupying the d u a 1 make up the Randy Sparks
role ti.. star an4 exeaiUve colletjiun. there .is aJsa, .a
,prOclµCef 'of the show. It group knpwn as the Randy
prondSeS a "new look And ap-Sparks Collect1on ..
proach wttp a new sour··" "~.llen Lu~n·a Gall_ery" _is
-The 9 ! . minute show. not a run of· ~ rnj!!· taik
orlginateS in the west ~ coast show. €J.¥t.dlat w-elimma~cd
color studios of Channtl 1 t, in favor o~ meaty convers11tlon
KTTV, and ! eat u res the , cente~ m~each show a~d
star with' pr 0 v 0 cat J v e two . JoumaliJIUe ~naliUC!'i
personalities, top singers and ~bo have written Jncmve pro--
comedians, conver5J1tioniSts flies of , famous ~le , or
and sorrie audience partlclpa-n~wsma¥ers -perlortners, tion. . milllonai~s, •m.u r cl ere r ! ,
An Albets 'Product.ion ln We~ef1gures, poliUcos and
association with Me~media ·
Television, the nationally syn. No stranger to . Southern
dicated Show-comes complete California televiStol! ~viewers
with Ludden's "family," in· pf K'M'V, Ludden is moderator
eluding the Randy Sparks col· of the long p o p u I a r "Password" game show, and Jection or vocal groups, headed
------·------------------------------
. ; , . . •
• CololNI
sound .or . ' \ .. Oran.le ·
County
Music!
RADIO KOCM
103.1 FM ......
FROM FASHION ISLAND. NEWPORT BEACH
. '
by the seven-member Back has appeared as guest host of
Porch Majority, and the Rod Serling's "The Uars
swinging music of arranger-Club," on which his beautiful
composer H. B. Barnum and actress-wife, Be Uy W h i t e , i------,..---.,.--.--..--.,.,-,--..,_,.-~--,,..---,------,.
orchestra, comprised or seven serves " • P'' m • n' n l Gloomy Gus Tells it As You See ii
cians. ----------------------.-----------------
l MARGOT FONTEYN ANO RUDOLF NUREYEV IN "SWAN LAKE"
talented West Coast musi-1 panelist. '
Other · "familly" merobers
Include Belland & Sommer-• •
· Royal Ballet Pairs
Fonteyn, Nureyev
. Announcement or caSting
~details for the s e v e n
1 yerformances or th e Royal
~ Ballet in Shrine Auditorium,
~1·July 2 to July 6 brings the
~ -news that Dame Margot Fon-
=:..teyn and Rudolf Nureyev will
~ance together in four of the
~-seven perfonnances : t he
• opening night, July 2 in "La
.,. ·Bayadere," the second night,
Thursday, July 3 in the full-
1length "Giselle"; in "Pelle.as
and Mellsande" on Friday
evening, July 4 and in the full-
...., length "Romeo and Juliet",
-..Sunday night, July 6.
:;::. Other dancers scheduled to
~dance leadin~ roles during the
"•.Shrine Auditorium engage-
ment are Brian Shaw, Monica
Mason, Derek Rencher, Alex·
and'er Grant, G e o r g i n a
. Parkinson, Desmond Doyle, ' AntoJnetie Sibley in "Enigma
·v ariations", and Vergie
'l;;o Derman <Monday): Ann Jen·
..._'net, Anthony Dowell, Robert . .
Mead (Tuesday); Vyvyan Lor-
rayne (Wednesday); Alex-
ander Grant, Carole Hill, r
Diana Vere, Susanna Ray~
mood, Lesley Collier, Patricia
Llnton, G-eraldlne M o r r i s
(Thursday); Antoinette Sibley
and Rudolf Nu reyev (Friday);
Desmond Doyle (Saturday)
and Marilyn Trounson (Sun·
day) in the new Ashton ballet
"Jazz Calendar" on opening
night, July 2.
Friday evening, July 4 ·An·
toinette Sibley and Michael
Coleman will dance "La
Bayadere''; Georgina
Parkinson and A n i h o n y
Dowell in "Raymondli" and
Fonteyn and Nureyev in
"Pelle.as and Melisande."
"Coppelia'', Saturday
matinee July S will feature
Diana Vere u Swanilda and
Keith Martin as Frank with
Stanley Holden as Dr. Cop.
pelius .
"Swan Laite", Sa t urday
evenipg, Jµly 5 will find An·
•OZ! .. ,...,. • .,.,.,,...,...., toinette Slbley as Odette-Odile
• and Anthony Dowell as Prince ~ Siegfried. The four Cygnets
\viii be danced by Carole Hill, Live
'·Theater
· . Avril Bergen and Suzanna-
!' Raymond. ~ The Sunday matinee, July 6
. "Romeo and Juliet" will
feature Merle Park as Juliet t and Donald Macleary as
Romeo with Gary Sherwood as
~, "Breath of Spring" ii An English comedy on stage
·at the Huntington Beach
.Playhouse, 2110 Main St., Hun· r: tlngton Beach, Fri. -Sat. at !i 8:30 p.m., through June 28. i• Reservations -847-1631. •• l ''The ThreepeDDJ Opera"
~ · Musical drama on stage at
ij South Coast Repertory. 1827
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa
Tburs . .Sun. through Aug. 3 at
8:30 p.m. Reservations -646-
l 1363.
I
Merct.Jtio; Ronald Hynd as
Tybalt and Michael Coleman
as BenvoUo.
The Sunday evening "Romeo
and Juliet", July 6 in addition
to Margot Fonteyn and R11dolf
Nureyev as Juliet and Romeo,
will see· Kenneth Mason as
Jl.1erculio, Desmond Doyle as
Tybalt, Robert Mead as Ben·
volio.
John Lanchbery will conduct
all performances with the ex-
ception of "Swan Lake" and
the matinee performance of
NOW PLAYING
BEST tJ, PICTURE
........ OFTHEYEAR!
WINNER
6 ACAOEMY
AWARDS
NOW PLAYING
OMAR SHARIF
''CHE''
PAUL NEWMAN
''HOMBRE''
CINEDOME 21
A ' GREGOff'f PfCK I . . . !
OFA ..
MOVIE
COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS
IRIHRT I DMIR "Romeo and Juliel" when
Emanuel Young will take over
the baton. •11:1 / 11111r · .• .,.ONO ••• " •.
!..
·! For 'Noises' ..
Fast-rising A m e r i c a n
vocalist and composer Melanie
• has been signed to compose
the original music and songs
for "All the Right Noises," a
i, Max L. Raab-Si Litvinoff pro-c'.. duction currently filming in r London.
'• Melanie, whose first album
h (or Buddah Records -"Born
• to Be" -has Crt'!ated a sensa-
"~ tion in the ·music world, is a
folk·blues singer whose unique
• style has been compared to a
mixture of Edith Piaf, Janis
Joplin and Buffy Sainte-Marie .
She is presently perfonnlng in
England, following s m a s h
engagements at the Olym,pia
Theater in Paris and 'the
Troubador in Los Angeles.
"All the Right Noises," star·
ring Olivia Hussey, Judy
Came and Tom Bell, is a
modern love story, ;,eing
• • •· ' t-" r.e"ry O'Hara
from his own screenplay.
I ·
-·---...__
Its ready to color your world with happine.~ _,
Direct from
reserved seat
engagement!
• CARL FOREMAN'S
llClllll'l IDLD
Co·slarr1ng
TILLT llVILll
JULIE NEWMAR ·CAMILLA SPARV·KEENAN WYNN ·TED CASSIDY
and THE GENTLEMEN From HADLEYBURG in alphabetical order
LEE J. COBB · RAYMOND MASSEY · BURGESS MEREDITH · ANTHONY QUAYLE
EDWARD 6. ROBINSON ·Ell WALLACH ·Directed byJ LEE THOMPSON·Sclllenplayby CARl FOREMAN
EDWARD G.R081N$oN
Based on the novel by Will H!NRY · Musi~by QUINCY JO!lfS· PJOduced bJCARL FOREMAN and DIMITRI TIOMKIN
"" SUPER PANAVISION' TEliHNICOLOR' S1£~EOPHONIC.SOUND . ~--~ S1.19'1ffltd for MATIJJIE IUdlftltu
{pirtn"1 disCltilOr\ ..i'o'lstdJ . TOMMY cvmvLE I Hear Jose FtliciallO $lf\Q the "IAAC1<£NNA'S GOto· 111eme-01e TLITTey Buzzard' on lhe RCA soondlnlck album and lillglt.] ~
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~ ll.ft1MlfD w SCMIHJllAV 11v Pf!OOUCtO ev DlllCCTtt> •v I CNIW.9Cllll) IMCI UMOlll I l'endmf •lY. IWIBUR6 & FllEO SAIDY· JOSEPH LIHDOH • FRlN~S FORD COl'l'OlA_, .......... .,..
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• '
2nd Feature at Both Theatres '
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• . ' .
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--~--.·~------~-__,... ·-· --~--~-----·---------~--~-·-·--------•
..
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES l'OR·SA1:1!-HOUSES FOR SALE
\ l DOOGentral 1000 Gentr1I 1000
1----------------1
~·.\ . ' ' . ' • . "
' " ' ' ' ••
• ! •
:•
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PROUD? You Bet We Are!
General
RANCHO LA CUESTA homes at Brookhurst & AUanta
in Huntington Beach ope ned UNIT W on January 24th
-sold out by ~larch 20th.
On June 1st the last hon1e in UN IT IV was sold.
Do you get the fHling you had better hurry???
UNIT V IS NOW OPEN
Priced from $25,995 lo $34,200. Sales of lice open daily
JO to 7. Phone 968-2929 or 968·1338.
JOOOGeneral
I
1000
FINER HOMES '<"0 THE REAL \'-. ESTATERS
DOVER SHORES-BA YFRONT
Char ming 5 bedroo1n home with large liv-
ing room. formal dining room. enorm~us
n1aster bedroom; sunny breakfast room with
view. Handsome exterior. Asking $125,000.
Ca ll to see.
TREMENDOUS FAMILY HOME
' .
646-2313 • 646·7171 • FIXER-UPPER
Charining Nc1vporl H('ights
~~ block from CliU Dri\'C. J
Bedrooms. family room +
den, $26,900. • NEWPORT
'· -Situa~d on % of an acre; 4 large bedrooms,
• · , 5,000 sq. ft. o! brick. tile.~ wood: all d_o~n
.... stairs rooms paneled. 1Jv1ng room. d1n1ng ~ : . roo1n, den & beamed ceiling gan1e roon1
COTTAGE •
Neat small hme. Lots of
closet space -one bedrool
plus den -huge lot with pa-
tio -$22,900.
; .. v,rith huge fireplace. Beautiful Anthony pool. • NO DOWN G.I.
Gener1I 1000 Gener1I 1000
PETE BARRE11
presents
OPEN HOUSE -If you are looking for
that special family--0riented home in Bay·
crest with 4 bdrms, den, formal dining
room & family room -child safe pool.
Visit
1706 SANTIAGO Sat/Sun from 1-S.
WESTCLIFF CORNER -Adult occu·
pied. A particular home for particular
people. 3 bdrms, dining room & family
room -plus pool! Heavy shake roof &
used brick. Low maintenance yard. All
appliances included with home.
1224 Nottingham Rd., O~n Sat/Sun 1-S
TERRIFIC VIEW -An elegant home!
Do not miss seeing this beautifully dec-
orated adult occupied home in exclu sive
Dover Shores. 4 bdrms, dining room,
family room & large center island kit-
chen. Separate maid's quarters. Over-
sized double garage -off street park-
ing.
JUST LISTED -Look at the pluses
that make for a great family home: *
4 bdrms * fan1ily room * 15x35' play
room * large yard * fruit orchard *
quiet location * Eastside Costa Mesa.
'''.'' ' . ' '''''''' . '. ' ' . ''' '''' '$39,000.
FIRST TIME OFFERED -Lovely 3
bdrm famil y room home in the Bluffs.
Light & airy end unit overlooking wide
green belt 'vith lush Pine trees. Truly
choice location.
OFFICE OPEN S•I. & Sun .
PETE BARRETI REALTY
1605 We1lcliff Dr .. N.B.
642-5200
---
1000GeMr1I
HOME ON THE RANGE
l/4 ACRE
Lookirlg for someth ing w i t h some
"LANO"? Here it is! J,'4 acre ideal
for the family who needs room for
any type of recreational v e h i c I e.
<;reat access to all yards, Custom
built with 4 bdrms, w/w carpets
throughout, Roman tub & shower,
service porch. NO DOWN VA OR
FHA or Conventional. Terms avail·
able. Hurry! Hurry! Only ... ~,050.
COATS & WALLACE REALTORS
1491 BAKER STREET
~141
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
G1"1r1I 1000 General 1000
I ;;;;;;;f;;O;;VER;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I Vacant And Ready TAK 5%% Sparkl;,,g d"n and lo<ated
in a prime Ne"-'POrt Beach
GI LOAN location. 3 bedrooms, 2
· baths. panelled living room
Thi.o; '"HIGH BAI.,.
ANCE"' GI loan is mon-
r-y in the bank Jot' the
buyer looking for a
sharp 3 bdnn home. On.
ly 5 minutes to OCEAN.
Boat storage. out.Aide
shower for those return-
ing from the BEAOI.
Pool sized Jot + many
extras. 10% do11·n will
handle. FUU. PRICE
$28,500.
•
COATS ..
WAlLACI
REALTORS
546-4141-
10,... -h9J
11•ith 1vood burning fireplace,
formal dining area. Spacious
kitchen and separale aer·
vice room for tun and ho~
bies. \Valk to MarWrs
School. library and park.
Out of town owner \l."allts
action $34,500.
''For A Wise Buy'"
) $90,000. Call for appointment. •'· DOVER SHORES
2 Bdrn1 -2 bath on R-2 lot. General 1000 General 1000
Room for "'"'"" un;1. CM 1--------;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Garage & Workshop
be purchased FHA with low, POOL TIME IN -
Colesworlhy & Co.
•'
642-77TI
.. "
Owner \Vi\1 trade down : Aristocratic 2·slory
view home on choice corner. 4200 sq. ft.; 4
or possible 5 b e d r o o n1 s, 411\i baths; pie·
turesque terrace 'vith summer hoose or ga-
zebo. 2 Fireplaces: h u g e master bedroo.ni
suite. 3 Car ~arage. Planned for ente~ai.n·
ing. $92,500. Open Sat. & Sun., 1534 Anl•gua
\Vay.
DOVER SHORES
~1agnificcnt custom built hom~:.3 bedroom~. 3 ~i baths. fan1ily roo1n: exquisite \Vall CO\"
erings; Jarrge terrace with o~ersize pool, wet
bar. $1 59,500. CalJ for appolntment.
ASSUME EXISTING LOAN
AT 7'/2 °/o
Beautiful. ne'v \Vestclif( 4 b~dr~m. 3 bath
hon1e. Huge family ro_or:i with fl!eplace &
\\•alk·in bar: formal d1n1ng room, glatnour
kitchen \vith breakfast a re a. Ne~r Dover
Shor es. Asking $82,500. Open daily, 1338
Santiago Drive.
General
john mac:nab
REAL TY COMPANY
90 1 Dover Or., Suitt 120
642-8235
1000 Gene ral
$18,9® GI No Down Or Assume 5112 °/o
178.00 mo. Total
4 Bedroom
College Park
low do1-vn. $2.j,OOJ. MESA VERDE
• PRESTIGE AREA!!! ASSUME •
s:i. LOAN
~ bedroom Mesa drl f\lar
beauty. Huge family room
w1 lh raised Jireplacc, !l('r-
vice porch. fe.nC('d yard.
New outside paint. $31,500. • COUNTRY
ESTATE
Jn the city. 20x30 Li". Rm.
Loi 125 x 300. ti car t?ara:::c.
Elcc. kit('hl'n • Hdwood
rloors. 20 x 40 swlm pool •
$79,500. • 16'x4S'
MORNING SUN • • •
TWIHKUNG LIGHTS
&-e these beauWuJ new Ivan
Wells' homes facing the Bay
in Dover Shores. 5 new mod-
('ls to choose from. 4 & 5
bdrms, 3 baths. 3 car gar-
agf's. Formal dining room,
eating area 1n kltchens. All
with outstanding vi('WS. With
or wil_hout pools. Furnished
model open daily at 14.30
Galaxy Driv(',
Roy J. Ward Co.
{Baycrest Oflice1
1430 Galaxy 646.1550
PLAYROOM
4 Bedrooms, 312. baths on Sf'·
eluded private drive, Sep.
playyard ·Family paradise
Truly one of lhr lovclif'SI
homrs in O!'ange County
with i1s luxuriou11 3 bed·
rooms and 2 bath adorned
with !oe-tickling soft ('arpets
and gorg('Ous d rap cs!!
Chttrful r.1cdall ion kitclK-n;
&:run1ptious family and liv·
ing roon1 11-·1th 111assivf' slone
fireplacr oVPl'·looki~ im·
maculat(' garden patio and
sparkling POOL!!! A dream
hon1c ror Jan1ily living for
the young execu!ive that en..
IC>J1ains or lovrs rtu~ qui('t
neighborhood of towering
shade trees. OHeN'd at a
10\v LO\V S41.950 1~·ith XI.NT
TERMS!!! For SALE or !":;::;:;;:::;;::
TRADE on our guarantee '*JJf·M•" lradc program~ ,~---.,.111 • $54,500. 10'7' r:lo11·n. WE SELL A HOME
\0 THE REAL
''.'"'.. ESTATERS
EVERY 31 MINUTES $lOOO LESS
'-. '' '• I j Walker & Lee
646•7111 • 546-2313 Z79J J-larbor Blvd. at Ada.ins
54;;.9491
Bright & Churfuf Open 'til 9 Pi\t
11'iU De this lo~ely\Jargc ~fesa Hone Country
Verrle Colonial hon1c in a
wt'Ck or so \\.'hen complete Back Bay
rt'dccorating '11111 be com-Keep your wife and your
pleted. 5 bdrms. dining & horsr happy • Over 1~ acre
family room. Anthony pool -nesUed 111 11pj)("1' Nr111X1rl
farm style kitchen ..('!e. Va· Bay. J\'c11t and <"lean J hcQ.
cant about 6/26. Open to room doll house. Plenty ol
offers! \1aluc here! Olcap at $3t9:,n
S46·S88(1
Prict" just reduced on
this unmaculate 4 bdnn
Paces('TlC'r. Corner Joi
location on a qu ie t
streel near school and
park. BeRuliful condi-
11on'. Perfect family
homf'. No1v $.16,500, See
H at 2865 Chios Road .
$600 Down FHA
Paynu•nts lrss than $1 ;)() prr
month for a 3 brdroorn t1r\
L·\P.GE LOT. This Jfl ~'f'ar
your!'.~ t:harn\er is CLO."£
TO SCllOOL anrl near Jree-
\\'11,.\~. Rang:1• :ind O\'fO. CAR-
PETS AN 0 DRAPES'''!
Roon1 fnr BOAT OR CAI\IP-
ER: L·u-gc childt'l'n·~ play
an·ii. J:\li\IEOIATE POSSES-
SJOJ\""'.
fntlr cinema thetlrt)
No quali!ini;, anyone can as-LLEGE REALTY
snme existing low in!l"teSI 1500 bins el ltarbor,.cJt
Se/l('r says: }[" \\Ill carrY
a big chunk • if you 1•·anl
a Joan? \\'on'l last. cau
llO"''!
--D ick Forda
3041 J ava Road
Costa M1se
WE SELl A HOME
EVE RY 31 MINUTES
'•'··', Joan \\'lth all built in I ,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.~I
kiit'.hrn. rl~uhll' garage. fort·
rrt ll•f' ll{'a1. hlock \\·all fenC<'.
ll!'wk fh'('placr. t•u1 dr s:ic Jo1
\11111 lruit trePs galo1·c, you
t·an'l n1iss. Call today.
645-0303 'l.'ou are lhe winner of
2 licke!s to thr
BEAUTY SALON I ORI \I I. 01.\0\
"' 11£/flTQQ~
FIREWORKS
Includ ing all cquipnirnt. !100 SPECTACULAR
111 the Sil fr bldg. on 50x150' proles-ANAHE IM
sionally zoned lo! near Beth-Walker & Lee <"! Towet"!I' & Vista Shopping f--::.=o-=-=----STADIUM
1 Cen!c.r. $6jOO do\\•n will han-NEAR \VESTCL!f"f 011 July 4th
j 2790 J1al'bor Blvd. at Adams dle. 3 Large Bedrooms. 2 Baths.
Large double garage, tool-
shed, 25x.25' \VOrkshop stress.
ed for second story. Covered
and enclosed patio -boat
storage area from paved al·
ley. Thrtt Bedroom. two
bath home with EXTRA
sPACIOUS ?.JASTER BED-
ROOM and private b a I h.
Well kepi property in NEW-
PORT HEJGHTS area. Full
pr ice ONLY $.12,500 -CALL
FOR APPOINTMENT.
wow
5112 °/o INTEREST
Low down pmt. will assume
S%i% loan without any sec-
ondary financing, its four
bedrooms, 2 baths, b e s I
C.OStB Mesa area. Buil t in
kitchen plus n1u('h mo r e,
your total payme nt includ-
in taxes, insurance, princi-
pal and Interest will be less
than Sl.80.00 mo.
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. l71h SI. 646-4494
$146 Per Month
lndude!l all wllen you take
over this fo\v interest GI
loan with only Sl.000 dO\\'ll
payml'nt. Just put on lhc
1narket • should go !his
1\·eek. Sec 100ay.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY Jl MINUTES
Walker & Lee
BAYCREST •
$46,000
Just placed on the market.
this exceptional pride or
ownership home should be.
seen immediately. Private
court yard entry, beautiful
yards with room for a large
pool. and access tor boat or
trailer. Submit your smaller
home on our guarantee sale
plan.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2013 Westcliff Dr.
64G-77ll 0J)('n F~'ves.
SELL or TRADE
Horse Ranch
2 BR 1 bath home, gar~c,
fenced yard.
Want
3 BR 2 bath home on an f'X·
tra large lot. Can &dd cMh.
1860 Newpol't Blvd., OT
Rltr. 64£..3928 Eve. 644-1655
Lachenmyer
TWO ON LOT
Assume 6 °/o Loan
••.»"'91 ORANGE COUNTY'S E rnie Cleveland, Rltr, Living.rm & family rn1 boih Please <·all 642-5678. rxt . 329 ! ...., '" I t I C J d cl '.?ml \\'estcllU Dr. ~ Oprn 'lil 9 p_\l LARGEST 61;..01s1 or 611;.0CQ.J f rapcriri<, 1 Ins. u ·dc-s11(". he11''l'<'n 9 an l pm lo 'aim
--~~~~ J ---------"I l1n1nac:ul11!P! S.12.900. By your tickrts. fNorth County 64&-n11 Open Eves.
VA Joan at no cost, no chgs.
no chaJ1&e in ratl'. Vac. 3 &
lam rm. Ne1v 32' hid pool.
lOCKl' brirk de('king. 2 ba. 2
yr A rs you~. $36,950 . I DAILY-PILOT \\',\,\'TAD:-:: 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 SOCK IT TO "EI\t : 011/lf'r. 6--l~-167~ aft \2 110011. toll frcr nunibt>r i~ f>W.122n) While elephants! Dunc-a-line .. 1=:~~7"""'=='~~""''-::'~~~~~~~~==-=========~~~==~====~~;;;~~;;;~~~·~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~;:;~;;;:;::: P .W.C. 546-5440 1
General 1000General lOOOGeneral
• BIB •
INTERESTED IN INTEREST?
5 5'1i loan can be assun1ed! Interested in
neighborhood? Lovely (\Uiet street in \Vest-
clif[~ Interested in \"alue'? Charnling "·ell
constructed three hedroom hon1e priced at
$48.500! I nterested~ J>lease call us~
1000General 1000Genera l 1000Gen1ral 1000
BAY & BEACH REAL TY -ESTABLISHED SINCE 1949!
Gloden M . F ay -Realtor
Co-011·ncr and r.tttna.t:rr of \\/('stcliff Office
During our t1A•enty years experience in the
Ne,vport Harbor area, we have seen it gro\v
and develop, and have actively participated
in communjty activities. Our intima te kno,vl·
edge of the area quaWies us to advise and
assist you on a professional level.
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
·Open Houses
THIS WEEKEND
Kttp t his h•""' cllrKtory with you tills wttk-
tnd as you 90 houae-huntln9. All tht location•
listed below a re de1crlbed In grtiater det1ll by
•dvartialna elHwh•r• In today's DAILY PI LOT
WANT ADS. Patron• showing open ho_u••• for
u lt or to rel\f are urgtd to ll1t 1uch 1nform•-
tlan In thia col\H'l'ln each Friday.
(2 BO<lroomj .
**20 Balboa Coves, Nel('port Beach
675-6000 (Sat & Sun J-5)
(2 Bedroom & Family or Den)
115 Via Orvieto (Lido Isle) NB
673-8830 (Sun 1·5)
(3 Bedrooms)
214 Dahlia, Corona del tvlar 646-8811 (Sa t/Sun & Mon 1-5)
19561 Roderick Lane, Huntington Beach
9611-1928 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
242 Joann Street (College Park) CM
540-7755 (Please call for appt.)
2032 Miramar, (Balboa Penn) NB
675-6000 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
(3 Bedroom & Family or Den)
230 Virginia Place {Eastside) Ctvl
646-8811 (Sat. & Sun. 1·5)
1010 Oak Street, Costa 11esa
642-6937 (Open Daily)
*1224 Nottingham Road (Westclilf) NB
642-5200 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
3233 New York Avenue (Mesa Verde) CJ\1:
5454265 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
2612 Redlands (Back Bay) CM
546-5460 Eves: 642-4951 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
200 Via Genoa (Lido Isle) NB
673-8830 (Sun 1-5)
287 Nassau Road (College Park) CM
646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
217 Via Eboli (Lido Isle) NB
673-8830 (Sun 1-5)
11 47 Gleneagle, Costa ?.tesa
540-1720 (Sun. 1-5)
(4 Bedrooms')
1148 Santiago {Dover Shores) NB
642-8235 (Sat. & Sun.)
1534 Antigua \Vay (Dover Shores) NB
642-8235 (Sat & Sun)
1018 Nottingham Road, Newport Beach
642-8235 (Sat. & Sun.)
4008 Marcus (Newport Island) NB
675--0363 (Sat & Sun 10·6)
*21 46 Vi sta Laredo {The Bluffs) NB
675-5764 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
(4 Bedroom & Family or Den)
*1706 Santiago (Baycrest) NB
(Sat & Sun 1-5)
115 Mitford (Cameo Shores) Cd M
675-6996 (Sat & Sun 12-5)
* 1801 Sandal\vood, Ne\\•port Beach
642-8235 (Sunday)
1338 Santiago Drive (WestcliU) NB
642-8235 (Open Daily) * 1347 Hampshire Circle, Nei,vport Beach
642-8235 (Sat)
118 \'ia Xanthe (Lido Isle ) NB
673-8830 (Sun 1-5)
1518 Antigua \Vay (Dover Shores ) NB
646-3255 (Sun. 1-5)
2314 Irvine (Back Bay) NB
540-1720 (Daily l-5)
1430 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) NB
640.1550 . (Daily)
(5 Bedroom)
2060 Pharalope (l\1esa Verde) C1\ll
549-06S4 (Sat & Sun 10-6)
(5 Bedroom & Family or Den)
2038 Calvert Ave. (Mesa Verde) CM
54tl-0556/637-3930 !Sun 1-5)
DUPLEX FOR SALE
**3409 Finley. Ne,vport Beach
833-0700; 644-2430 (Sunday)
APT. + INCOME
**320 Via Lido Nord (Lido Isle) NB
673-0305/675-3243 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
1000Gt neral 1000
• BIB •
OWNER WILL FINANCE
7'h%! BALBOA P ENINSUL.<\ POINT! Open
Sat. & Sun. 1-5 P .r-.I. 2016 E. Ocean Blvd.
Four bedrooms (two LARG E), three baths
and family roo1n. Extensive remodeling
E"es. 548-6966 We have recenUy moved to 901 Dover Drive,
Suite 126, Newport Beach. where we can
serve you more e!lectively and efficiently.
\Ve are enthusiastic about our area -location
.. and listings. Come and consult with us !
, done in 1967. Un usual floor plan! Price -
$65,000. Eves. 673-0479.
i
I
l •
f
)-
1-
CLIFFHAVEN !
OPEN SUNDAY 1.5 P.M.-324 SNUG HARIOlt
Three bedroom borne ideally located ou a
picturesque tree-lined street close Lo all
schools. Ov.'ners leaving area. 11omc avail·
able August 15th. Price no"' $34.900.
El'CS. 548-4810
GARDEN CONDOMINIUM •
BACK B.4\' AREA! Three bedrooms, f\\'O
story, large living room \1Jith fireplace. Shut-
tered throughout. 1-'"or sale or exchange.
$41.500. Eves. 642-3287
645-2000
ASSOCIATIS
flort'n!'t' i\lt'Ctrr
1 !nru!d D .. Arthur
l:ichard A. Tryon
Lucilr Basledo
L.ouiS(' Coll\('r
Gllldy~ Rtuli('lJ
$r('rrl1:1 rr.
l\:itty Ailbl'lght
BALBOA • OCEANFRONT!
Decorator's o\vn beautifully furni shed five
bedroom four bath home! Glamorous • de-
lightful -different ! Exciting colo r combina·
l lon) Jluge Jivi ng room "\\·ith glassed·in sun·
roo1n overlooking the Blue Pacific! Intimate
dining roo1n. Elaborate 1naster bedroom-Sil·
ting room. All woodwork, wardrobes and
kitchen cabinets in an antiqued furniture fin-
ish! Price firm at Sl25,000 including furni·
turc. Eves. 548-6966.
BAY & BEACH REALTY. INC.
:\rt ?JO" f11fereslrd 1n s tlh11g your property~ \Ve tl.iollld t.i11!wme llie opport1t11ft11 of co11111ltin17 wlr1& 11ou without obUgatloTt.
IRAND NEW!
\VAlTING FOR YOt.:! Drastically reduced.
Four bedrooms and den. BALBO.i\ PENl!\1 ..
SULA ~ Open daily 1·5 P.~1. 1358 E. OCEAN·
f'RONT! Eves. 548-6966.
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX!
Three bedroo1ns and t\\'O baths eaC"h unit.
Near Fashion Island Shopping Center ! Price
-$62,500. Eves. 678-0479.
645-2000
·--~-~------~----------~~----------" ...
------------------------------------------~-~------------......----~~·------~-
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
FUN FOR THE FAMILY!
In the DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
Hott'• ... It_.. ••• Chodc tho Clonllfl"' flOttl ttdl day to ... II J.OU• oomt 11 P"blllllH 11 t -lal t4. It coo •l'P"' lo
uy claulflcatlao. II It don, call '42·5671, oxtOMloo 32', b--t A.M. ond 1 P.M. to clalm yoor 2 "" Tlclcots. A....,...,..,.
coo bo made for you to pick 111 ... •p at •Y -1 .. t DAILY PILOT offlct.
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
F
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
Gononol 10000.neril 1000 Gen•r•I 1000 General 1000 Newport INch I 200Nowport BH<h 1:11111
' NEED A 91G HOME?
SEE: 2700 WAVECREST, CdM
OPEN SAT. & SUN. I· 5
4 Large bdrms.1 plus family room \VI
\vet bar. Loads of cupboards & closet
space. Transferred owner says. "sell!"
$65,500.
0£ LANCY
REAL ESTATE
MESA VERDE 4 BR
This h a s lo be the
SHARPEST -4 bchm
hon1e in Costa r.tesa!
O ut side you'll find
BLOCK FENCE,
PLUS I! LANDSCAP·
ING, SHAKE ROOF &
LARGE BOAT SPACE.
The inside has new UP.
-GRADED CAftPETS
THROUGHOU1', ser-
vice porch, L A R C E
BEDROOMS & dish·
washer. The ex.is.ting
loan can be ASSUMED
at 5% 'lo interest. The
full price ls only $31,450.
SOLD YOUR HOME?
Need something I a r g e r!
?>fake this MUsr SEE! 4
Master ilil.e bcdroon1s with
vanity nook. 3 Ba1ha. Huge
family room wilh \Vall to
wall firepla<..-e. Formal di~
ing room. Elccl.rlc built ins.
New Carpers & Drape 1i
throughout. Assun1c Jo \V
FHA 5~ % loan anc( $3,000
will handle. GI no money
down.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
76&2 Edinger
S·l2-4"55 or 540-5140
Open Eves.
OPEN SUNDAY 12·4 PM
2021 Vlsl• C•udtl
In The Bluffs, Newport BNct\
Corporation owned home, taken in on trade,
must now be liquidated. Bluffs big "A11·plan.
has some bay view. Everyth.il:lk included. Will
be sold BELOW original Seiling price. All
offers to be considered. Corporation officer
will be on the property Sunday. 4fM.5330
Broker. '
Costa Mesa 1100 I HOUSES !OR SALE
Newport Beach 1200
EASTSrDE By 0\11ntr. 253
2B2B E. Coast Hwy /Corona def
673-3770
~COATS Mar~wA~ce
' REALTORS
=P ~~a!! BN~~1 i~n:; -4 'iiDiO'OMST
yard, room tor boat &. IN NEWP.bRT BEACH
trailer. Try $2250 d n · FOR $31,5001 .
646-2896 for appt. MUS! 'SELL • Owoer trans-
CAMEO SHORES
--<51446-4141-
IOptn E-ings) VACANT rerred. Bluffs top seIHnc.K-
$19,950. 6% FHA, $135. llugc Plan. Xlnt use ol 1li60 Sq, Ft.
yard, patio. 3 Br, 2 Ba. Private enlry, walled papa.
656 SUrl. * 642-3184 (rplc., brid&t. area in kilich-~,MMA="c"'t-c5~8"R-;:,_c::c=-;;1-::-I en. Steps to ........,, ls ocean , ..... m nn, in. ~
$1B,400
Pool Home
Take Over 5 1/4 G.I. £ASTSI DE NHr Tho Beech Only $135 Per Month Thii; delightfully clean home
gar., run1pus rm. 5* 'Yo view from upper bdrm&.
FHA. $28,995. By owrn". EASTBLUfF
..,,_,.., REALTY Includes everything. NO Sh k Roof Charm with sparkling rectangular QUALIFYING NECESSARY. i e pool, rear boat door and
3 spic and span bedrooms ' parklike front yard with
* BY· OWNER-POOL.. 3 Call us for other ffiufta'
BR, crpts, drps, X-L.rg LR. exclusive llatings.
and 2 baths. Hardwood Spacious ~ bedroom 2 bath sprinklers, can be assumed
floon! CUstm drapes. Beau-home with dining room plus for only $158 per monrh total
tiful used brick fireplace, large panellOO family room with low down, All ELEC
gracioUs yard with b I o ck with wf't bar and cozy tire-TR!C REMODELED KITCH-
wall fencing. As low as S2500 place. Dream kitchen has EN with breakfast bar and
down or try no down to vets built·ins and panlry. P..oomy nook Lovely carpets an fl
with a total price of·a low, tree shaded patio for suin· dra~s near schools and
low S22.la0. mer fun. $25,500. shopping. HURRY! HURRY! HOUSES FOR SALE
Low maint yrd, $.'JJ,500. 2414 Vista Del Oro * 646-2895 * NEWPORT BEACH
BY OWNER • Low interest 644-1133 Mf..2626 Ewt
514.fi'h% lrg translerrable -~
loans. All 3 BDRM's. 2-E "'l!!!llll! I side, 2 W side. 548--1059
iii 2500' 9 rm home + apt k
LIKE to live on a amall
Wand:' r~or sale by owner
due to divorce, ~
old house on New port
Island, 7 rooms 2 baths. Ru
been con1pletely pJOOdeled
• modem kitchen w/ blt-IM.
Lots of storage. Used brick
frplc & dining room ftlL
Bathrooms new w/sunkien
tub. Large sundeck w/view.
Nev•ly painted out 11 i ~e .
Across stn?et lrom Bay en 2
sides & 3 blocks from ocan.
$42.500 buys this 4 bdrm
homr. 4008 Marcus, JfB
675--0363
OCEANFRONT HOME pool. $38.700. m: Santa Aoa
Ave. 64.6-2544, 548-8333 WE SELL A HOME 230 Virg;n;a Pl , CM WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES (Open Sat/Sun 1-5) EVERY 31 MINUTES General 1000 General 1000 Generil
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
1000
Walker & Lee Newport Walker & Lee 1;;;;;;;;;;;;:==;;1--PO-o_L_T-AB-LE-,;,;,;;;;;;;;;BIG;;;:f;;;:IVE=;;;,I
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams at 2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams VIEW Been looking for a place to
Open for Inspection
SAT & SUN
4 &clroom, 3 bath. dining
room. fam. nn, 2 fir('places,
bltn kitchen, wet bar, laon-
dry room, fOOd center, inter-
con1, carpeted, Hlcd entry.
Dt>ep lot in top an>a • next
to Long Beech Marina.
BY Owner: 4 bdr. enlarged
Fttedom home. Corner lot.
t.1oving, 646-9TI8 eves.
5* LN, 3 br 2 ha. din nn,
encl patio, lush cptg, blt-\ns,
lrpl. Im mac S27 ,500. 62-1614 545:9491 545·9491 put one? Hern It is -Bcau-0 •1·1 9 PM Victori1 ._ pen I Open 'ti! 9 PJ\.1 Harbor V1'ew H1'lls tiful family home in excel-
EASTSIDE Costa ?.1esa. 5
bdrm 4 bath luxury home
1vith 2650 sq ft. H.eated &
filtered pool wilh automatic
pool S\\'eep & aulomatic clo-
rina!or_ Relax & enjoy this
nuxlern way to live.
PLACE )'OW' want ad where 646-8811 Mesa Del Mar lent location with separate
they are looking -DAil..Y • 18 x za root rumpus room to Mela Verde 1110
Pil..oT classilied! 6'12-5678 Anytime Low Interest Loan JUST LISTED one of the fei;;; accomodatc !"C!gUlation size l~~~~~~~~~J_~~~~~~~~~IYou can take over this 5'h% ~'Lusli" resales. This beauti-pool table, plus plenty of 5 BR, 2 story, 21((1 sq. It.
Mes a Verde Pacesetter.
Close lo bch, 1~ mi to golf
cour.ie. Has all extras? Fab-
lOOO Joan at only $149 per mo. ful 9 month new hon1e oilers room left over for <'njoylng
l·G:::•"::":':•::l=====l=OOO=::G::en::::•::ra=I=====::;;:-[ Beautifully kept 3 bedroom formal living k dining room, TV and the n"vnmolh stone
h· 2 bath hmc. Superbly local-informal fan1ily room, kitch-fircplac<'. Large bcdroon1s,
ed to all schoolc;, churches en & breakfast nook, 3 bd-2 "Queen" siie balhs, din-
and magnificent Soulh Coast nns with mirro~ wardrobe ing room and separate room
$47,500
100 Ocean Ave, Seal Beach
$84.500. Ex('e\lent lcnns
i21ll 447.ti(il7
1 ~-::::::=:-::::-::-~~~~~ \'u.lous lndscp'g w/ back foun-
WESTCLIFF
CONDOMINIUM
Coldwell, Banker
OFFERS:
IRVINE TERRACE '#2
Exciting 4 BR. home. Classic architecture.,
Swimming pool. Spectacular view of jetty,
ocean, bay. Our exclusive ......... $189,500
Mrs. Raulston
PRIVATE PIER & 60' DOCK
Beautiful Contemporary home \vith 7 BR.,
51h baths, including maid's quarters; on
90' waterfront lot. Lge. fam. rm., 'vet bar,
all electric kitchen. All custom built ... -
................... ' ......... $139,500
Chuck Place
BOAT OWNEP.S
You must see thi s beautiful cu stom 3 BR.
3 Ba. home on 60' Main Channel \vater-
front lot. Pvt. pier, 50' dock. Lge. farn .
rm., 20x50' sundeck. Only ........ $110 ,000
Chuck Place
REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE
DUPLEX: SLIP & PIER $77,500
OPEN SUNDAY 3409 FINLEY
Attractive 2-story 3 bedrooms 2 bath home
w/1 bedroom apartment. This \von 't last.
1 Block to N. B. Blvd.
Mary Lou Marion
IVAN WELLS 4 BR. $63,750
Courtyard entry. Baycrest finest. Family
rm., dining rm. opens to charming patio.
3 Baths. Room for pool. 3 Car garage.
Mary Lou Marion
BA YSHORE DRIVE
Just lis ted : sparkling home in areas most
sought after" location. Private beaches -
close to boat docks -3 Bdrm., 3 Ba. Gar-
den room... . ............. ,, .. $58,950
Mrs. Harvey
THE "IN" PLACE • The BLUFFS
Popular Trina Plan. 3 BR's, Irg. din. area
&: kitchen. Top bay view. Home in excel-
lent condition . Immediate occupancy ..
. . . . . ... . . . . . . . . ........... $53,900 ..
Mrs. Ral ston
FANTASTIC
BAY & OCEAN VIEW
From most of the rooms in this 4 BR. 2
Ba. home; a real sit-down view. La rge
fam . rm.. dining & po'vder rm . Owner
anxious leaving area ..... , . . .$53,500
Walter Haase
3 BR. -POOL -WESTCLIFF
Reduced $4.000 -Now just $44,750. This
immac. 3 BR., fam. rm., on comer lot
w/fenced play yard. Owner moving & anx·
ious.
Joe Clarkson
COLDWELL, BANKER & CO.
550 NEWPORT CENTER DR .,
NEWPORT BEACH
133-0700
Plaza, Call now! in master bedroom & 2 for oUice or hobby, Assume 645..030] baths. Lavishly carpeted lmv int!'rcst 5~~ 7o FHA Joan.
Newport
••
Victoria
Distinctive Add,..ss!
Lovely custom 3 bdrm with
cheery fireplace k expansive
patio for entertaining.
Located on ('Xclusiv(' Park
S!rl'f'1 in area of custon1
homC's & cloSc io fill schools.
2 available slarling a!
$32,500 FHA or VA lern1~.
tain. Close lo all schls, col-
lege, fr.vys. 54o.o556'
OPEN HOUSE Sun 1-5
2038 Calvert Ave,
2 story in Newport's finest
res. area. Near sbopp1ac.
Lovely patio, 2 bdrm!, Imp
closets, 2% baths, ti:replace,
encl, 2 car garage, pool, el~
gant clubhouse, Sawia. Own.
Land . Assume loan. $195
incl. ta.xcs. Owner Bkr. IOHl\IJ_ 01.\0\
RE~lf01'5
BIG FIVE
Convenient to Newport Frwy.
Back Bay, large deep lot
priced to sell at S28.500.
Owner says submit au off-
ers. Call today for app!, to
SCC'.
--Farr
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St. 646-4494
HIGH ON A HILL!
At cliff's edge high above the
Coasl H1vy. !hi<; atlr. dupl~x
has an unobstructed pano-
ran1ic view <Jf the bay lt
ocean! You'll never til'I'.! of
thls dream location. $85,000.
Try 10'/~ down & owner
carry.
mo CARPET
REALTY
202.'i \V. Balboa Blvd., N .B.
Call Anytime 67S-~-
Golf Course Area
Lovely large lot on cul-de-sac,
1 b\OJ:k from Club llouse.
pools & tennis court of Mesa
Vc«lc Country Club. Only I $16.25(1, Hurry!
546·5880
near cinema thelbtl
LEGE REALTY Adlms. at Kartl«,.Cll
1510 W. Ocean Front
Open Saf/Sun 1-S
QUALITY TRIPLEX $82.500!
tt1ay Trad<' F'or Lido
BALBOA BAY PROP.
673-7420
2309 W. Balboa Blvd., NB
* HALKRfST *
throughout. Fabu1ous view Paynients or $1&1 per
of ocean & mountains. Call 1nonth, lncludf'd everything.
IM.MEDIATELY lor appoint-Sub1nil your sn1allcr home
n1cnt lo ~Pf'. vn 011r ,::.1•'ll'all\r1• ~ale~ pla.11.
Open House
151 B Anti9ua Way
SUNDAY 1-5
Beautiful 3500 ~q ft VI E\V
home in Dover Shotts for
sale or lease option. Excel-
lent tcrn1s.
OPEN
2B7 Nassau Road
SAT/SUN 1·5
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
~Q.i3 WcstclHf Dr.
646-7711 Orx·n Eves.
8 UNITS
TWIN 4 PLEXES
COSTA MESA
LARGE 2 hdnn unfurn. units
Good carpet, Bullt ins, hard-
1vood cabinets, 8 garagC'i; and
generous private patios: ln-
con1r. SIOOO JX'r n10. Pric<'d
at SSS.500 Owners will tak<'
a rca~onable do1,1·n_ .. can be
sold as 4 or 8 units.
646-8811
anytime
Gold•n OpportunitY
G.f. no down. FHA mini·
n1um down on th(' 4 bedroom
plus Furnily Room. A real
sleeper. Deep pile carpel'l
wall t wall throughout. Su-
p<'r·brirk patio off family
room. lluge Lot! Many more
C-"tras for the pri<'C' ol
S~<l.r150. HUHRY'.
WE SELL A HOME
EVE RY 31 Ml NUTES
Walker & Lee
7682 Edingrr
842-1455 or 540.514(1
Open Evrs.
Cllll'»
Oic. 637-3930
Pacific S/JOrei; Really
5J6-889.I Eves. 536-3240
A REAL BUY! $29,51))
l(t)5 Dover Drive SPACIOUS 2 story, 4 BR, 3 Opcr:i House sat-Sun 1.C
BA. ExceJlent location on call 64&1948
-;~::::::=:~~::•I quiet cul-de-sac near ne\v iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliil
ii ----- -Estancia park. Beautifully OCEAN VIEW
L I BR Conag{' IV/"ar & zon-l••>d••a~ ~-~ d·••·gn•<t ., " ... r-v J"'"• ._ " Custon1 home wilh a view. e1t for businC''-'· $14,500 fo• '·m1·1y •n"'ym<nt La-• • w ... 1v ' ...... Deluxe 3 Bdm1s. 2~ baths. 2. ::! BR homC' & den, large living roo111, rornl81 dining
lo1. Garagr + \York.shop. rooin + fan1ily rooni. 2 Sharp as new & many~
R-2 zorl!'d. SIK800 Jireplacrs rwould you tras. A good buy at $42, ·
J, :t BR honle 1IJ1 ba~hs, near lx'licvl.' 1 In 11111.stcr BR '!I. 9 0"
shopping, SW,750 By Owner. AssumC' '.11 ~',l.. •_,:L1&
Wells-McCardle, Rltrs. loan. Principals on J y. ~:'A ~ Y
1810 Newrort Blvd .. C.M. $41.950. Ca11 5'10-0681 Near Npt. Post Ole. ~2414
548-7729 anyUmr ASSUME 5~' loan on
--ASSUMe$1j,40/o--Pulchritudinous " &droom --No WAITING
home near schools & golf for Lhe bath Saturday riJcht LQAN cou1-,;r._ Efficient kitchen. or any morning wilh a bath
NC>ed occupancy now'? Locat-
rd in lovely College Park
area, J bdrms, l~i baths,
family room. Close to school s
& shopping.
JEAN SMITH,
Realtor
646-3255
AL$.O AVAILABLE Vesl Pockel Rancho
Cuti·~\ 2 BH. home on quiet fa1ni!y room. frplc, 2 for each bdnri. There are 4!
street. Hdl\'d fh-,;., shade covered patios, sprinkler Plus a view from Abalone
lrcrs, R·2 Jot. systcin, 5 fruit tre<'s amid~t Pl. to Catalina. 3 Fireplaces
·100 E. 17th. Costa Mrsa
$3,000 WORTH FREE-
H you ASSUME lhis 5~4 F'HA
Joan on 2 story 1Qwnhouse
elt"gance! Yes, O\Yner is S3'.;-
1·ifiring Sl,000 worth or vcl·
vet likt> Ar.rilan carpets and
fabulous draperies for $166
per month, includf'd prime
interest, taxes, insurance.
r~oRMAL DINING ROOM!!
Medallion kitchrn and dish-
washer! Jl.lassivc SLUMP-
srGNE FIREPLACE in en-
tcrtalning living room. One
ol few W1TH A VIE\V, Over-
looking green belt! So many
luxurious features we can't
begin lo tell you, All this al
ONLY $26,500. Ask about our
guarant<'e TRADE program
on this one.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491
Open 'til 9 PM
16 units. 21 units, 60 units
\Y AL KER AND LEI::
MR. LEVINE
lncon1c ln\ICSlmC'nl Dept.
5'15-9451
4 BEDROOMS
No Down VA
This 1.~ a fJtlalily hoine \\'ilh
cement driV!'\\'aY & sh;1ke
roof. Only 3 years old . &>li-
er will ;;.-y all buyer's i:los-
ing costs & 1vill give you
$100 to move
546-9521 or 540-6631
J. K. Nichols
Realtor
10°/o Down·
$34,950
Sharpe ."""t1omc in back bay
area, 01vners have moved -
ilnmedial<' posses.~ion -3
bedroom & r·an1ily room.
Beautiful covered patio -in-
tercom thruou~ -Pool size
yard.
llol'srs & cowboys. Exu·a nJPC
2 BR & fanlily t'OOnl built-
ins &· dish1vasllcr. fu'f'place,
BBQ house with lircplacr +
s1ab!r & corral. Excellent
location. Submil fern1s, ask-
ini:; s:11,;-.oo. CALL '."1•10-1151
J!rn1ag~· Real Estate' (open
f'V('~I
(i bdrms, 3~• bath Baycrest
horn<' built by Ivan \Velis.
t.1ovini::-East. Make offer.
Arnold & Freud
3!!8 E. 17!h SI., CT\'1
Reallors 646-7755
Sl/4°/o LOAN
5 BEDRM +DEN
Loan may be assurned 1vi!h
p;,iymencs les.~ than rent. 3
ha!hs. Electric built-in kit·
chcn. Family rm., fulJ dining
m1., BBQ -rirepit. Orchul'd
of trees. ;,40-1720
rORTIN, REALTOR luvely landscaplng. Pricl'd blend \11ith fresh paint for
1701·A \Vcslcliff Drivr to sell at S27.~ by O\\·ncr. extra charm. Widow will
Nr>wporl Beach 612-::.000 ~>10-3&12 trade down • $5500 haodl~s.
PALOS Vl::RDE LJ~L~G~s=r:-. ~,,-1~~,,-,_-,-,-,,-,,-,srd Hal Pinchin & A110C.
l-'ENINSULA CONDO l'l'.!ar yarrl, block \\'all, Jge 3900 E. Coast Hwy. 675-4392
Salr. or IS<' op1io11. LI'~ 3 BR, p'1.lio, n1in. y11rC: crire. BAYFRON'J' MOBILE
3 BA, pr.nld den. Xtra lrg Terms & financing flexible HOME
rnast(·r BR. 2 pa!ios. Xtrn $169 n10. PJTJ. S23,7fill. Va· 2 Br cabana 21L ha, -•
slorag<'· Pool, c I u h h s e , Q / t 0•g_.,.,..,c ' ' •':! ""l'"c• cant 1v11Cr agcn · _,.. *'"'' av1:ul boat slip, adli &ection.
1•1lild 's play y1'd .. $35,9j(), :lt26 Barbados Pl. Community clubhouse, pool.
O\\·ner. !213! &33-7398 ASSUME 5*~{;Ffl/\3-13if2 game area, etc. \Vill trade
"BAYCREST" t»i, bll-in. fain r rn, up or down for tum or un-
5 BEDRM + POOL e f• ts Id rps . I 01 mac. furn Laguna Leisure World
Exclwiive a r C' a ! ranilly Beautiful patio hon1e. O\VC or hillside Orange Co.
room. 3 baths. Quality built-2nd TD-suhmil down. Honie. 546-7331
t o •. f" A""; :-o=:,-.,.-,=,,-inS. Gorgeous contour poo · .r ..,..,...,,, ASSUME 63f..•!o LOAN
Jr. Est.ate sized i::tounds. BY OWNER -4 BR. Ne1v\y Spacious 4 BR. 3 ba, Back
540·1720 det• inside & ouL Nc1,1· t-rpts-Bay cust. bit. home. 2
TARBELL 2955 Harbor tilr fir in fam rm. Drps, f11Jlcs., wet bar. Quie:t cul
frplf'. bllns. 1740 sq. I t. de sac .street; Asking $53,500
BEACH HOME $%.500 Prine. only, 3Zi3 142-C
:?-Sty. 3 Bdrms. 2 Baths
CHECK THIS .......... !!!
FURNISHED ....... S25.000!
CAYWOOD REALTY
6:::oti \V, Coust filvy., N.B.
548-1290
DREAM LOCATION
lo111a SI. 545-6448 PROPERTIES WEST
OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 102g Bayside, NB 675-4131)
By owner 3233 New York 4-PLEX
Ave. Beaut. 3 BR 2 bath. 200' TO OCEAN
$25,950. Assume 5-'l;&'ft, FlIA
545-426.1)
TARBELL 2955 Harbor Move in cond. Spacious3 BR.
OiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiii...,-2 BA; Westcliff sOOp'g area.
~ner. $30,950. 543-9500
5 BDR, 3 ha. Republic home
beautl!ul cond. by owner.
549-0684. 2060 Phalarope
Summer incomr. potential
"Hi". Partially furnished.
$59,500 -TERMS '
CANON REAL TY
• 675-3581 •
2 DUPLEXES Coll19• P«k 111s * REDUCED "fc l:to ·-THE REAL ~ESTATERS
{, 1 f, •, I J, On adjoining fee lots. 2 BR. Costa Mesa 11001--..:...------THE BLUFFS
$2:l,9j() _ l BR & dt:n. patio, 6 3 646 7171 ca. apt. Nr. ocean &. bay. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;; BY OWNER: Fully crptd 3 J BR. & 2 BA corner lot.
hd\vd flrs. 4%'1o -$11,000 Assume Loan 51,4% 54 ·231 • • Total price $105,(XIO. -BR 2 BA Ranch. Patio Ir view &: spacioua fffllng.
lst TD @ $129/rno. Commun-Balboa Real Estfltt Co. GOVERNMENT lg fncd back yard w/lrees. Cus1om carpts, drpa, other
ity pool. Costa ?o.1esa _ NpL l ixlrms l~ bath. POOL. NEW HOMES 700 E. Balboa Blvd .• Balboa FORECLOSURE Lovely oval Ux38 htd 1POOL f'-"tras. Handy pool, Owner
Realty 646·9666, 642-2221. $26,950. 26.U Riverside, Q.1 East11ide Cotita Mesa e 67J..tt40 e S('p. fencd. 5%'At lst. 644-0m
N H $28,950 Only I left ! 3 BR. I '!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!"'l'~"'l'!!!!~ I Big 2 story bonus room $29,900, $5.~ dn. Call for $41 .500 valuC' _ Now S39.SOO ewport ts. OPEN DAILY Nursery School Costa ?o.1<'sa. $1250 down, cull appl. 548-9578 eves or
2348 Santa Ana AvC'. POTENTIAL. 3 BR 2 bath priCf' $28.950. Near new, 1 -w~"""='~·===,-,-~o--New Home· 3 BR 2 ba, dt'n, 1 frpJ('. (Bet. 23rd & Santa Isabell bom~. oorner lot, l30x-ISO' freshly redecorated, lowest OPEN llOUSE Sat & Sun
room for boal or lrailf'r,64 -,.'·,.""'..,"'l'!!!!~E!!'~"~·~642~-5~t00,. I a1I fenced. Cal lfor dclalls. GI interes! rale to all buy· 2511 Duke Place, CM DAVIDSON Realty 333 E. ~t-~ .. C.M. "= en;. Vacant sec today, CALL A Beauty by Owner 3 Br, 2
""' H•r00r "" c.M. "·~~!!"!'!"'l~~~ No Down GI lhmla Eealty 54<J.n 51 "'",,..• a,.1 E~ ""· Excott t nds c ptng. 54S.S460 Evett M8-3584 i• 612 ,,,,,,,, tale topen eve51 Assume 6% GJ Joan .. '".900. ''ANGEL CAKE'' -wuo1 ~·
Private cu.l<IN&c street,. 4
bedrooms 3 bath. 'l5xll5 lot
forever view of Back ~
Dell.a Real Estate 64Ml14 2 NEW DUPLEXES Bread&. Butler Units Triplex ~ b'.!im + family room, $183 1-4"'"'B"E"D'°R"M..--.$0022,.-,-,SOO FOR SALE BY OWNER 546-9866
Corona de! Mar -So~ of Hwy. t.3 mi, from So. Coast Plaza. ~r mo pays! all or Fl{A or PATIO + BBQ 5~i 'if., J BR, tam. din, 1%. OWNER 5%. FHA. 3 BR, 2 200 Steps To a..ct;
BA. large family mom. Orv. Beautiful 3 bedroom 2 bath
patio. $27,500. 311 Nll.S.'laU home, d~p !!bag carpet A.
540-2496. Open house Sun ll-5 e~posed b ~ a m ~lllip
1'.fo11t a1tr., 2 & J Bdrms. F'inancing ls eagy: $32,500 .._..nvenUona · 2 r1uJ!nu1n ba!h8. Secluded Ba, S fl A RP ho1ne w/
each unit. Bit-in R&O, dish-BOYD REALTY $21,950 rear Uvlni room with fltt· OCEAN VIEW, I.gt! iol·low
1,1·asher, Open beamed cell-3629 E. Cot1sl Hiway, CdM RAND RL TY. 645-2340 place. Family roon1. £xtcl· luxes. $24.900. 1010 Oak St,
ings. Fireplaces. 679-5930 OCEANVTEW-l('nt location. 510·17'10 C.M. 642-6937
• Can Ow"'' 64Wl06 • TARBELL 2955 H•rbor Choic:: Corona Highland!! 2479 Fairw~ Drive
LIDO AREA APT.
Bay view, own-}'OUr-own. Lg,
l·Br .• bltns, cw;t. l\Jrn. Pool.
bat ~lips, $34,500. 1'.fay lease
yearly, $350 Mo.
Walker Rotlty 675-2676
While Elepl:Janl!I!
3 BR. 2 Ba. You own the TO\\IN HOUSE t:a~tslde 4 BR, 2 BA. Cov.
land? A buy al $44,000. Huntington Bay, 3 lxlr. 11~ p 1t I i o, ~ha k <' roof,
cn~BIN·MARTIN bath. carefl"'e. Pool, cluti. cllsh\\'t1~hcr, ft,"plc. tfflll!,
BEACH DUPLEX
2 Bachelor lJnits
Realtors t!hOI) ttnler. $19,500, owner. drp~. 5~'1 ~~ Cl $186 PITT.
J0.16 F.. C6.1.'it llwy .. Cd.~t 54S-0587 S2'J.OOO. e 646--2819
67J.43i>O • 6'i>l662 • OlAL. direct 612·5678. Charge Is Your Ad in our clll•ifleds T
X1nl location! $29,95()
George Williamson
RE:Al.TOR
F.ve~. 613· I 56>1 '!!!!~~~~~~~!!!! DAILY PILOT \VANT ADS your ad, then alt baek Md Someone w\11 be looklna lOr
socifI'-TO 'EM! Dial 642-M1'8 for' RESULTS llaten to the phone rln1t! tl. Dial 642-5678
No~~fl!!<h 1200
'FRESH AS A DAISY'
And ReAdy J.~or You
l Bdl'ms .• 2\i bll. t1nn1<'d.
po11~"'· 2131 Vlsla Larcd1.1.
A be~t buy • s.11,950.
BOYD REALTY
362!1 E. C'ontl Hlw-.y, CdM
675-5930
I
lhrouahout, 3 landscaPf!(I . "°'· fuepfac<, all balllto
kltehen, d o u bl e Pfllil.
m.lOO. 612~0 1
BA YCREST • by OWN!l&
3 Odnn. 2 °"'· Din. ... &ck yd. 1'iay assume lr;jn
at 6~% $46.950, Call &i:MtJO 64z..tno 1
Whit.! tlepl\Altl8? Dtme-..-llM
l
' • ' I
• .
I
. -.
f tr1aaJ, .JUtlt 1.1, J.'Jt>'t ~· 'E . H SES !'Oil SALE HO"SES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE l!ENTALS RENTALS RENTALS ·~~~r---~)~2A2~E~u!Muff~~--~1~24~2~1~L~ldo~l~sl;e:;;;:;;;;:;;g1»~)~L~ldo~l~1lo~:;;;;;;;;dl3.!~I H...ti!!t.or !lo<lch 14GOl;lyql/!!'!':'. ~ch 1400 · Koua• l'""'lohod H ..... Unfurnished Aph. Pum ....... ~. . . l~~~~:~:~~~~~~~~~~[-~su~m::me::•~R~entel1 2910 Mo11Venlo 3110Gonerel . . 4000
1. GREAT LOCATION UDO ISU OPEN HOUSE TOUR MO.DERN ·.LIVING HABRABOYRFR .• IOSNLATND
3,:·!.'::":::·i+~~ HOUDA'l PLAZA •
IN EAST.LUFF
huge c:ov patio W/ttone B-DELUXE, apac\oua J..Bdrm.
' •• ' SUNDAY 1 TO 5 New homes, Teady lo .ll.ove •• ln, JL Jnile from < lldrm. & maid'o; pl<r l a.Que. 1l50 ll>d ..,.,.nor. FUrn apt. 1135. Pl"' Ulll. , ,'Y_ :.r;, ~•u Avail ,..... • A•~ 54n .,.," Heated pool. Ample parkltlc
: t 1ao· View of C.taUna'-B~ck l!>y & Moun· beach. FitSt paymen iup to 60 days after iZOO Per .;..,,ii.':' • -· ~ No clilldren-No ,.,. ~tains. Acros• from Yark. 2~00 sq. It. 4 4 Lovely Homes-4 Top Values moveinTermsVA/FHA.Fr~$22,'°8 , DoverShore1Bayfront Newp!lrt.llNch 3200 1965Pmnona.C.M. ~~~RMS. study, big yard. BY OWNER 2 Bdrm., f•n;;'{' J,:•bhRviETO ... $51,950 • : ~ sA=#.:,~r sUp avail. ;4;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,jT;anBA~1 af!t_ a::~::~
·SHOWN IY A""OINTMENT ONLY , The Be"""ch 1rv1n• rerr•c• 111 -=-'-"";,,-~~~-i 3 Bdrms., Conv. den, 2: bat~1 . , .... $59,500 U Panoramic view ovtr entire TOWNHO $125. 2 BR' triple¥. w/w, ttf'o
lot" * * 644-()571 * * 217 VIA EBOLI (on Bri>okhurat 1 mile Soulll of Adams! bay & jcl1y. <Bdrm>., pool. AI JLTS ONLY~~E~ d '"''-Avall 7/1. Bkr. -!!!!!!!!!!!!! 962 °1353 !..~.:.:!tbuly, & A...m. $1500 "'hm, 21> b<ttla. Splltt~.i o..;;-=:<:=,===== 4 Bdrms., den, 21/2 baths . , , ...•• $69,000 !!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!' '"""' .,.... 1
118 VIA XANTHE CAIL' JOHN MACNAB Cui>eb, dra"' "built-Ins. 4100 REALTY CO 64U235 3 car garage. Faces pool, Cotta Mesa
fountafn Valley 1410 · · $265/month. ---------1 1250
BY OWNEft
3 Bdrm1. & den, family, d in .. 3 ba •.. $99,500
200 VIA GENOA
Huntington llHch 1400
OLD HOUSE BLUES??
" Corona del Mar ALSO $30.00 wk. up
TRI-LEVEL BA YFRONT ADULTS ONLY! 2 bedrooms, e Day, -1<, month. Chamlng ocean l!ont home BAY VIEW
<Ill RA lo>. 3 bed ""' + UNUSUAL DESIGN
tl'!"llfl>JC rm. Ideal loc.ation, Lovel,y Broadmoor model
nr IChoola. t'nclosed patio. home w/beaut. bay & ocean
1_, crptg thl'ougboot. Le view. 4 Bdrm.s., lamily nn.,
. ,~ w/blt·irl& $67,(XX). 2% batb!I. extensive land·
UDO REALTY INC. Last year, at thb time, dur-
ing our Record Week, we
sold 154 horoe!I. We'n J:Oing
to top that record during the
last week in June. Call us
now. so your home can be one of the lucky ones.
STRATFORD home in tip.top Second ln-...st lot on Bay. 5 2 baths, Split-level, Carpets, e Studio & Bach. Apts. shape 4 bdr 3 ba Sunken _,'"" drapes & built.ins. 2 car •Incl Utos &: Phone serv. • • . • BR, family room. 4 baths. g•-••. H<>C inonth. fam, rm. Fonnal dm. 2 frpls. Dock with Sno)Vbird Sabot ---• Maid Service, TV avail. ~ndscaping, cpts, drps, .all & surfboard, Volle).. ball Bay & leach • New Cafe & Bat
673·8830 3400 Via Lido, Ne wport 8 e1ch
8,13--6990 scapmg. Grand winner in a Lido Isle 1351 I Huntington Beach 1400
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
included. Owner ~m.muting court on large sand beach. Realty, Inc. 2376 Newport Blvd. 548·9T.'15
lo L.A. As.sumto exis.tlng low Every room in house looks 901 Dover Dr .. NB SUlte 126 F1JRN 1 bedroom. duplex.
FHA. F 0 r appt. <213) out on Bay k jetty e:ntrance 64S.2000 Eves. 548-6966 $97.50 mo, util pd. I C<l:1' gar. ·I JR. 3 Summer Mo, national design competition, the home features vaulted
548-2152 ceilings w/heavy beam con.
OWNER'S NEW C BR. strucUon. Just 5 min. from
l'Mrtlm' View Home. 3 ba's. the bay & beach. Fashion
1iv nn, din rm, lam rm, lsland & San Diego Fwy.,
t.r, Jg. kit, 2 trplcs., w/w with all of tM amenities
.:Ot>tg drps, yard & many of the smaJI community
extras: 6.9 ti n a n e i n,. idea. $65,000. can tor app'L
548-82!1 CHESHIRE REAL ESTATE
WXURY 2 BR, 2 BA C.Ondo. 1---"•_::675-:::::2Stl3=._:•,___
:!':,!,'.'7.,~ .~~"':' .. ':.': LOVE SALE
------BAYFRONT llotne + in-
come. finest beach Joe,
Newly furnished. Sale or
suinmer rent.als. Xlnl tine
owner wf carry. 675-3243,
613--0305
IMMACULATE. 2 BR, trplc + Guest Rm. 2 Ba., bltns,
new cpl & paint, )tint Lido
location. $5,00'.I d ow n •
Owner. 675-5023 or 675-7709
Open Sat &: • Sun. ~79
·~& wlmds. MaJTiage necessitates selling Huntington Beach 1400
lhU ••tove" C1f a house, ••
tsAYFRON'J' Q.ASSIC CON· FROM THE
PAGES OF A
DECORATOR
MAGAZINE
TEMPORARY 3 BR home Newly crptd &: decorated. 2
-...iith pier and sUp. $139,500. BR. & guest suite, Spanish
:wAU.ACE L. NEFF, Rltr. home on •·tove''ly Poppy
673-15lKI Ave., S. ol Hiway, Neat yard
3 BDRM Waterfront, No. 62, w/divine old avocado tree ...
llalboa C.ovea. $ 6 O , O O O , PLUS oranges, figs, & Dow-
Would Q'ade for acreaie or crs, 3 car parking, 45· lot, That's \vhere you'd ex·
-apts. 548--ml LOVELY neighbors. Perfect pect to flnd this out.stand·
MOBILE HOME $19.<XX> "home" or retirement villa. ing !peciaJ borne decorat·
Ba31ront on Peninsula Owner, weekends or eves, f!d by one ot America's
675--3!1B, 67!)...32216 6~7751 or Agent John Mc-foremost designers, Ham·
6lQiCe PARK LIDO Poolside 1.;.N;:ao;b.::6<2=-8235=_:1.::0 '_:•:!Po:P"t--ilton·Howe. This brand
Condo. 2 BR 2 ba. $28.500 • Country Atmosphere nc1v 3 bedroom, fonner ~ dn Agt 1)46..{1732 near the ocean. Designed for model borne is really .r-· · family wilb children. tills 3 "turned on" with decora·
wtu.J{ to Beach. 2-story A-BR &: den ho~ is a "must tor de1ig-n extras like ex· frame 3 bdr 2 ha comer. see" at $42,500. Built on pensive Spanish t i I e
$30,900. 642.-35«7 large lot .. you own the land. Doors, c.Xclusive w o o d
LEIGHTON LINDEN RL TY wall treatment and pan.
642-7141 or 673-().'.l72 eling, built-in bookcases. 1210
J)UPLEX 4 m old. 2 BR OPEN HOUSE 1·5 v.·aU paper with a wallop,
.,ch. Built·ins. crpts, drps. June 2Sth thru 29th: 3401 carpets, draperies, lush landscaping, sprinklers,
IM9wport Heights
133,500 Owner. 6 4 6-2 51 <t. 0 c ea n Blvd, Spectacular and air conditioning, An-
~Prtnclpall only, ocean & jetty view from this other tidded plus: you
t luxurious, oceanfront, 3 BR can walk to the beach. ~ Sho,..1 1220 &: den home. Oranne Coast Pron.rty Near everything in New· ~R SALE by o··-· 3 ··• ,..-Port • Balboa • Lido. Ex-"" u .,.,..... 332 Marguerilto 673-8550 Bedroom. patio, garage. c:ellent financifl&" avail·
community pool & BY OWNER· 3 bdr .. 2 Dath, able and a surprisingly
-playground. :! blks lrom 2 fireplace house w/hatbor low price of just $34,990!
oeean, Newport Shores. 242 view at Chlna Covt'. Dlb, Won't last long -move
Ldgonia. NB M2-3286 garage, patKi .. $65,00'.I. In now and enjoy tbe sum·
538-2691. If no ans, call mer at the beach. 968-19!!7
~~ATER.FRONT By Owner.-633-9800 Bkr. ·fl>.'ISO. • BR, 211 Bath!. !-=~=-------1 .~..,.~~~~'""" l[aJ'l)' extras. 428 62nd St., e OCEAN VIEW e I : MB * GG-3869 9 mos. old Lusk 3 BR, 21' Beautiful Tri·Plex
BA home, Opts, bltns, den, Just oU Beach Boul~vard
W•tcliff 1230 dlninc rm, 2 !rplcL Newly close to shopping. Let the
I ~<-;;;-;;;:;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;, I lndscpd. By owner. 644·0411 tenants make your pay. I• ments. Income ls .$365 mo,
ON A Lowly quiet Westclifi SHORECLIFF 3 BR. 2 BA. Electric Built ins, carpets
. st. In Mariner Elem. Ir: Npt. Quiet tree lined a rea by the throughout. Some furniture.
Hi Dist Fee 1iJnple, heavy i;ea. Fee ilmple. Access to 2 Priced lo SC'll at $35,500.
thake roof, panelled !iv rm, beacbes. Under $50,000. By Submit your term.! lo
.din rm. elect. blt·lnl. 3BR1 owner. * 673-368! WE SELL A HOME
Ba, clean ept11/dl'J)s. 2 3 BR 2 batM, large living EVERY 31 MINUTES
patio<, .... run. $42.""1 ., room. ....,.. k;,' h .. • Walker & lee ·~. 642-1598 wonderful view, $55,000. 1000
1~~~~,.,."':"~"!"~ I s .. "'"'" CdM. 6#-4229 OWNR: 2 bdnns + den, lge DUPLEX, nr. ocean, 2 BR. 7682 Edinger
kit &:: liv rm. lovely garden 2 BA. + 1 BR & ba, Large 842-4455 or 540.Sl40
,w/little maint. $U,SOO. Call lot. privacy. Rltr. 673-21)10 Open Eves,
.,,.. • "'""""'........., I.GE. hilltop lot Perm. vi•w *CREAM PUFF*
University P•rk 1237
3 BEDROOM
Townhouse. with extra large
back lot, ideal for dog run.
Full pr. $27,500. e Red Hill RHlly
, 18068 Culver Dr., Irvine
OPEN 9 AM-8 PM 833-t£l0
o1 ocean & hills. Assume thls 51.4 % FHA loan.
Realtor 673-IDlO $1.SO mo PITI, 4 BR, 2 BA,
CHARMING Duplex on dbl fam rm. F.P .• F.A., drapes,
corner lot, S. of Hwy. new crpts. Built·in range &
Owner. $58,500. 673-4169 oven; dishwr. Outdoor Bar·
CAMEO SHORES • Ocean-B-Que on cov patio. Cot. lot \vi boat gate, Nicely land· fro~~~ d:n.675-ti996 scapecl; Orange trees. $.2ti,950 =="'======== I By Owner, 842-16.'lG
Eestbluff 1242 Lido Isle 1351 POOL TIME IS HERE
Heated & filtered Anlhony
pool. Super sharp 3 bdrm11,
hardwood tloors, lreshly
painted inside & out. B"sl
area. GI or Fl-IA t('rms.
Rare buy al $26.000,
·---------------COMFORT & CHARM
Large family boine • 3.000
sq. ft, Many xtras: parking
space, 50' corner. 2 Jpl., fam.
& din. rms, Some_ Vir\v.
$105,000.
SALE or lease option, Bluffs,
·• hdr, C·plan, $39,500. Open
Sat-Sun, 1-5, 2146 Vista
Laredo. 675--5764 ow n e r •
agent.
BLUFFS • 3 br, 3 ba, v.·/
Bay·Vlcw, wide greenbelt
Steps to pool. Cus. addtns.
Save! s«.500. Ownr 644-4265
3 BEDROOM, 2 full bath, 914
Citru.~ Pl. Open hou.se,
6129/69. 12-5 p.m. 644·2175
BtrSIESI' marketplace in
town. The DAil..Y PILOT
Oas.sifled section. Sa v e
money, ti.mt &. effort. Look
now!!!
DAD...Y PIIm WANT ADS
BRING RESULTS!
R. C. CREER, Really
3355 Via Lido 673-9300
TIRED OF
OLDER HOMES?
See this 6 yr. old family home
v.•/4 bdrms., conv. den & din-
ing room, Call for app't.
Walker Riiy. 675-S200
MAKE A MEMO to gather
up toys you no )ongtr need,
sell them for cash with
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS!
White Elephants!
MUTUAL REAL TY
842-1418 Anytime
ELEVATED ~ Br. house,
open staircase; cpts, drps,
hltn.~: Lge. square Jot, cut
de sac sl.reet. Paved boot
yard v.·ith gate, cinder block
fence. Nr, stores. schools.
beaches. $38,000. 0 w n e r
003-2'142
BY OWNER: 3 BR, prof.
lmlscpd, pa!io & fountain.
968-1928 19561 Roderick Ln.,
H.B.
White elephants! Dimc-a·Hne
1Ge.;..;..ne..;....••~1 ___ __;3000 General 3000General 3000 .
'
...
'
S@ll.SU~-l&"B!rS"
• S9lve a Simple Scrambled Wonl Puzzle for a Chuckle
Ol:eammo• 1.rttB cf the four 11cn:1mb1«1 words be> low to kim four li"'PI• won:b.
llSlTSIN l _' I I I I I' . ll~j~jvl I I )
) l
( . •
1 ______ _
f
NA 11 C l Jealousy 11 ·the mod radf·
II I I I' cal, primelfOI end naked form
• • • • • of admiration. It's admiration i:;:======--fn--. c.-11 1rinMPE• I ltL.su ....... r I I I I o ec.iptm t1i. ,~,. ciuotec1
. by ti1linj In tile mls$inq word1 -. .. . . -"°" ~IOI> IOll ldep No. 3 b.lcw.
·~~l[S r 1· r r 1· 1· 1· 1· 1
I, •=::f°'l I I • I I I I I
SCRAM-LETS ANSWQIS IN CLASSIFICATION 7800
•
LIST your property
with confidence
SELL with profe"'
sional skill
THROUGH
YOUR
Walker & lee
7682 Edinger
842-4455 or s.ro-5140
Open Eves.
763-1336 Mr. Cutright, owner. 11 car parking, $2500 pe; 220 Sierks St. 548-&347
1475 month· July & August. C.Our. Don Wiiiet STUDIOS $110. 1 BR $120.
tesy to brokers. Ph o n e 3311 Seaview Ave Sleeping rm $60. Older people
OR 3-7865 or Ml 2·2111. Corona del Mar pref, 2135 Elden Apt. 6,
FOR LESS THAN
$20,000 BAYSHORES
Garden Grove
REAL TOR MEMBER
Huntington Beach/
Fountain Valley
Multiple
Listing Service
Finf' 3 BR home. l1nn1cdi· 2, 3 &. 4 Br's. July &. Aug. You are the winner o!
2 tickets to the Assume ately available on any trrn1s "'C'' THOMAS
1, ,1 Can You BEAT THAT? REALTOR FIREWORKS
LARGE 1 BR, dishwasher,
bit-ins, $125. Mgr. 745-B
James. 642--8017 or 646-2271
1 BR, $90 pe r mo. No pets.
Mature adults only. Good
area. 64.2.3108 5 t4 •10 Loan Rex L. Hodges, Riiy. Zl·I w. Coa" Hwy. 548.5527 SPECTACULAR
$165 Tot1I Per Month 8~7-"~25 ~====~~~;;;::====~I at ttic 20x10' panelled den -4 BR on tJie water. sandy ANAHEIM $130 -2 BR, util. incl, Older
PLUS 3 BR 2 Bath L•guna Beach 1705 beach. Newlycarpeted, tenant pl'l?ferred.
HAFF DAL REAL TY I;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;· ;;;;;;;;;I c'rapes & furnished. $300 STADIUM 642--6560 Eves. 645-2020 0 WALKER&
• LEE, Inc. I 1 "'kly-July & Au: us l , on July 4th 8740 Warner, r .v. 8~2-4405 3112 ACRES 673-7449 Pl.ease call 642-5678, ext. 329 Newport Beach 4200
7682 Edinger Ave.
Huntington Beech
Golden Opportunity
842-4455 Assume lhis 6% GI loan .
only $2950 down. 3 Bdrm. 2
TRADE YOUR HOME bath, hitns, large lot, 1 yr
Regardless of how much old. A steal at $26.950,
equity yau have, on this HARBOUR REAL TY
t'iuper sharp two-!ltory, with ,, e 847-8595 •
winding staircase leading to 2 BR l'h BA Condomin· 4 Master Sized Bedrooms. ' ium. Balcony overlooking formal Lrg pool, lo~ maln~enance.
d' · "th hi k 1..n.... Only 36 units. CaL owner tn1ng _room w1 ~ <? s,_._ fo1· appl. S3fr3268 or
carpeting. Stunning tire· 536-3096 M S "th place, or try $5,000 Down and · ev('s r. mi
take over low interest GI RARE: VILLA PACIFJC
Joan. Asking $35,500 Submit, 4 br, 3 ba. 21h car gar, c/d.
WE SELL A HOME rec areas. Assm 6* FHA
EVERY 31 MINUTES 962-i;io
W I k & l iioP""EN~HO'°"U"°SE,...._ 74 ~s=DR=M. a er ee 9461 Nool•ni Dr. HB. 8"t &
Sun. $3500 do\vn to 6*. %
1'~H.A loan. $210 mo pays 7682 Edinger
842-4455 or 540.5140
Open Eves.
LOST IN SPACE!
everything. 968-2947
Huntington
Harbour 1405
Undrvetn-"" lan<l C't of 1 C,.""~~,--~,-~~ between 9and1 pm to claim '--''-----"'--~ "1""" .. · 1 Y 1 SUMMER hse on Nprt Isle i·-Laguna. 9 Blks. lo beach. \\'liivc In . d 4 your tickets. (North County NEW SPANISH
?c'an views. S~ould divide BR/sundeck. S~ !.! 0; $550 loll-fret number is 540-1~) VILLAGE APTS.
rnto 13 lots. Prlce $40.000; l'llO. July, S600 mo. Aug. ~E Bluffs Meditenanean 1 & 2 BDRM. Furn or un-
29'70 Dn. A real slerpcr. 675--0363 Villa. Delightful view of the !urn. Air-cond, dshwhrs, sell
MISSION RLTY. 494-07311,;;.:::-==-------Bay from all rooms which clean'i ovens, patio, break-
""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""12 BDR apt i;leeps 6, slcps to open onto 50' sundeck. Pool. fast bars, private fundecks,
UNUSUAL vie\\'. cusl. quali· ocean ~lOO/wk in July. Lease 1 level 2 BR, 2 BA, lrg storage closets. Heated
ty 3 Br. 2 ba. home on ap. ii:'/wk in Sept. 113 18th St. $425/ or 2 level 4 BR. 3 BA, pool, saunas, ba.r-b-ques.
prox. '·~ Acre. $ 4 g, o O o ~'==~-----$500 month. 497-1537 or Sound proof walls.. walk in
Broker NEWPORT Bcb. 2 bdr, 1 ba 644--0837 closets, covered carport.
615-6591 494-7161 Res. $150/wk. adults or family 1 FOR LEASE large 4 bdnn, Adults, no pets.
UNIQUE Laguna Hideaway, block lo beach. Call from ~ family room. $315/mo. Jean Tl-IE CALlFORNIAN"
Terraced gardens, liereened 9 pm. 673-325.1 Smith Realtor 646-325.5 Phone 546-2717
roon1, fully crp!d. Exquisite WATERFRNT, pier, & Ill 2 BR, w/w, cpts, frplc, drps, SINGLE Young Adults Lux-
canyon view. S 1 9, 8 0 0, steps to ocean. 2 or 3 BR, refrigerator, range $158. ury garden apta with aiun..
494--63~1 $125 per wk &: up, 4010 Adults, no pets. 642-«41 try club atmosphere and
VIEW HOME River Ave, NB. 673--8229 complete privacy, SOUTH
Furnished 2 BR. bllns, 11,\i OCEANFRONT, So. Laguna. University Park 3237 BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine a.t
BA. Owner w/ help finance. Beaut. Ium. :l Br. Avail. Ju. 16th Newport Beach •
Princi pals only. 842-46<X:i. ly, Aug., Sept. $1200 Mo. 3 BR lam rm 2¥.i ha. vu, ~--'-7_14_1_64_5-0550 ___ _
';'::"''='::;='==,O=='O;::::;l ,,'A"g!:l.~4~!l!l-~2238~:_:499-'1403~~~-Lease, rel, avail July L FURN. Duplex, 1 & 3 Bedrm,
Laguna Niguel 1707 CLEAN Balboa Beach Units. 833-0l()f or 213 434-54M 3,f, Block rfom o cean.
. Sleeps 2 to 10; ·for summer I ~=========I PRospect 4-3917 or LA
FOR sale by owner, unmed reservations ca!l 673-9945 E11t Bluff 3242 >5248
occupancy. 3 Br. 2 Ba hse. 315 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa 2200 sq ft of elegant Jiving
in lhis spacious GLEN MAR
with l 8x30' den, desired
built-ins, intercom & much
more. Excellent 6% loan &
only $29,900.
(t Br 12x21), Golf course
DECORATOR'S 2 BR, 2 ba. vieiv, exlra Jgc lot. 24012 LIDO l.sle Ba~tront. ~ BR., 4
Townhouse wlboat slip, Estancia Ave So Laguna ba. home, pier & shp, July
Pool, tennis S311,7JO Rib'. 4.95-5998 ' · & Aug. $2500 Per Mo.
---------!·AVAIL. July l~t. 1 BR., I
LOVELY 3 bdr 2 ba, Jge blk. to ocean. S160 Mo. Uti1
fenced patio & yard, ideal pcl. Yrly lse. 67>1642
children. All elec bit ins. Newport Beach Realty
673-2010 RENTALS BROKER 67l-8830
105' ON water, 60' dock. 2800' Houaes Furnished 3 BR., rumpus nn., 2 ba.
custom design 3 BR, 4 i--C..:.:.:..-C."-'.:..:.~"-'-1 Sips. 10. Lge trees. N'pt.
b&lhs. $105 M. $15 M down. General 2000 Heights. $500. month.
<213) 43G-2542 Olcshirc' Real Estate
FOR JSale Cit Je:ase 4 BR, J 5 BDRM, 3 ha, lastf!fully 675-2503
Pacific Shores Realty
!147·85.% Eves/ 96U701
VACANT
$305 mo incl gardener. Av11.il LARGE J BEDROOM
July 2nd. 644-1657 ~150 month, yearly I
'°FO""R't..C:=,".,'-'o.;.r..:,::"17•-. 'Bl~u~f~l,-4· : .~=*~*,,,,,:Gn.stm,,:..,c;,:~*c.*;;_,_
BR, dininc r o o m , im· e WINTER RENTALS e '.
maculate end unil. Vacant. \VINIFRED L. f'OSS, Agt.
$410 mo, 675-5764 or 673-9060 e 642-3850 e
Mrs. White agcnt-ownr. BA, w/fam rm. 2!XXI sq It. dee .. l~e lam, r~. form din, CHOICE N. Laguna Joe, 2
Out of town Owner. 3 BR l~ 213: 592-1665 elC'c kit, lge patio, 2 c gar., BR frpl gar walk bchl 3250 Balboa Island
ba cpts/drps, bit-ins, 70' c.or I:=:========~ Country Club area. $500 mo. tow'n. Mo' or wk 497·1056 eve Corona del Mar
lot. FHA or VA fin. or cash Fountain Valley 1410 Lease. 546-1713 best. 1--------_;_~I WATERFRONT AP1
4355
to 51.4 % fOQn. Rush! • CAMEO SHORES e on Balboa Isle. July only
BRASHEAR REALTY C. R. V. Rentals to Share 2005 ~Aw~~";~~~ve3:i:: 3 BR + conv den, 3 BA, $~.wk. Call 673-9388.
847-8531 Eves. 968-U78 Camr iri at $34,000. 3 BR 3 HAVE S BR 3 bath house, August. Sept.54.8-3158 Ocean View. Avail for short CUTE Bachelor Apt. yearly.
Wow!
, 511 01 LOAN bath. separate den, living term, long tenn or lse opt. $12S incl. util. 324 Onyx.
B
. h ,....,.:. 14 10 rooni with fireplace, service furn. Want mature man to BEAOI at door. Newly furn $375,..., .... mo. Box 4001, NB, Close to North Bay.
ng t, ....,.._..,ry 4 Bdrm home. porch, kitchen &: family room share $165/mo includ. util. bach apt starting at $50 per ·~-~==-=.,-,;,.-,..--..,I~:""'".'.'"".'=~=;"";:::;:!
1-fardwood fin;, bltns, xlnt in back. Room for IVW'll, 549-2623 or 64&-1058 wk. 536--2579 Htg Bch. ;;-H aN"a. $135 mo pays all. A r"' 2 BR House, excellent cond. untington Beach 4400
buy at $23.000. Submit on shakf' roof, block wall fence, l\1ATURE woma n share my BALBOA 2 BR, sips 6, or! st. Married couples & no ~arpets & drapes. niobile home in exchange park'g, 100· to bch. $160/\vk children. $250 mo. * 675--3291 * 1 BR at beach. Adults
'HARBOUR REALTY • for help w/ housc"''ork. incl util 675-2153 • only. Lease.
•
847
_
8595
eHl_IW!J!p 675-5458 Huntington Beich 3400 219 15th st., llB fT!!1113T1f" WORKING girl to share new RENTALS -NE\V $200 up. 1-2-3 Br, htd
OWNER'S vacant 3 BR 2 3 bdr furn. home. Fnln Val. HouHS Unfurnished BI_G_ horn". beautiful con· & sauna pooli;, rec nn, Heil
bath. 5~ % FHA loan, NEW, By owner, 3 BR, 2'Ai area. 541-5131 until 5, after dition, huge ~ered patio, & Algoquin, Mgr 84&-3137
$120/mo -$22,950. Open to Ba1h, v.·/v.' carpets, drapes, 7, 968-3782 General 3000 boat or trailer storage,I======='==='="=
offers. 19802 Isthmus rnr. bll'ICk fellCC. Many custom ------------co_mpletely built-in: 4 BR. Garden Grove ~10 Adam~ & r.Tagnolia ) features. $31,SOO. Euclid&. Mtl• Verde 2110 FREE RENTAL BOOK $255 /mo. l mmed1ate pos-536--4558 Talbert, nr trwy. 962--6479 -------~=lwe have anolher l:x!autitul J session. Bier, 546-4141 SING LE Young Adults Lux-
NEW S BR home, adjacent to Bedroom, 2 Bath home for CONV, Joe. Clean 2 bdnn, ury garden apts with c:oun..
blesa Verde Country Club. lease at $179 per monlh. All hrdwd firs, curtains thn.iout. try club atmosphere and
Avail OO\V v.·ith lease to Sept electric Medalli<>n home. range. Lge fncd bkyd, 1st & eo1nplclc prviacy. SOUTI{
ClIARGE your 1,1:ant ad now. White elephants! Dimeoa-line
NO MATTER
WHAT
~· .. •.
IT IS
• ' ' i
e • e
YOU CAN
SELL
WITH
IT
A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
For Fast Service &
Expert Assistance
DIAL
642-5678
DIRECT
5, 1969. S500 mo. Call Available July ls!. last mo, water pd. $125 mo. BAY CLUB APTS. 13100
633--9393 ext 188 or wknds w I k & l 842-4019 CHAPMAN Ave.. Gardt-n
213: 456-2362 a er ee l BR Townhouse, l'l?dec. new l~G='°="="=l4~l ,,,63'N030====
Newport Beach 2200 7682 Edinger crpts, drps, refrig, wshr. L 1> h 470S 842-4455 or 54().-5140 dryer. $140 mo. 1st &. last agun1 u••c
OWNER will lease luxury Open Eves. "10· 847-7t76 100 CLIFF DRIVE
Condom i um horn e FOR lease-El Toro. 2 i;;tory
Eastbluff area, overlooking 4 BR, 2 bath, wl bltn
Back Bay. 2 Bedroom, den. kitchen, lrplc, cov patio,
21, Dath. Decorator furnish· fenced yard. 2 car gar,
Pd. Available no~ S664 mo. Avail July 15 at $240 mo.
References required. 837-2103 aft S.
547·1641 675-2221 I-=========
DOVER Shores bay front Costa Mesa 3100
home, 6 BR, .f ba. large ---------
patio, 70' private dock, June 2 BR. Couplrs, $110. \Vat. &
& July. $2500 mo. Beg. elect pd. No gar or pets.
TOWNHOUSE 1 BR, bltins, Two bedroom furnished
RIO. l'l?frig, pool & tennis, All Deluxe Features
,w-;;';;;":o'"pd';":. l:cll::c0:.:·.;67:l-7-,l:_:TI:::5'-.,,.~I \Valking Distance to Beach
4 BDR, home "'' 2 ba, bit-in $22:i -Yearly lease
$225 First & Last w/ $:i0 494--2449 ~d~'"°'~i71.7534-~7'~~2----11·,-c-~-,-A-t->----~
LOVELY 4 txlr. + lami.ly, 3 Apts. Unfurnl1Md
ba, all bit-ins. 2 mi frwy.
s21;, Lsc-. 962-00~ Generel 5000
Fountain Valley 3410 e RENT e Sept, yrly lse, $1000 mo. 237A Costa ?.1esa SI,
213: 780-5013 or 2 1 3 : ~67.,'3-C.1'-'7"15'-------CONDO. 3 Br. Deluxe crpts
785-6333 2 BR, gar. patio, cpts, drps, It drps. Dshwhr. Pool.
3 Rooms Furniture
$20 ·$25 & UP
OCEANf'RONT Older 4 Br. stow, .refrig. Tropical i;et· 962-4968, if no ans 646-0471 :t.lonth-To-Month R~nfal1
WIDE SELECTION Li Yd. Yrly, $300 mo. ling for adul!!'I, 1 blk shops.
673-8088 $145. 544-4180
LOVELY 3 BR. oceanfront LCE 2 br. house, bit-in stove,
home, avall. for July & Aug. dbl. gar. lge, fenced yard &
REALTOR.. 6'5-1642 patio. $140. Vacant July 6.
548-<680.
L19un1 Be1ch 3705 Appliances & TV's avall.
. No Seeurity Deposit N. end .charrr_ung 2 BR 2 BA, HFRC Furniture Rentals
close m. quiet. Mature cou· 517 w 19th CM 548-348l
pie or lady. No pets. Refs. 1568 W Lncin Anhm 71._2800 $275 lse. 494-Sl09 · •
Irvine Terrie• 2245 AITRAC 3 BR, frplc, bltn.'>. BEAUTJFUL View-2 Br. un..
f'ORMAL EXECUTIVE 4 f~. patio, lg dbl gar. &-turn year lease. $22.'l per
bd , ,, 1 k . side nr schls .. Btwn S.7. nio. 549-2463 aft ·5 P-"'· VEN DOME
r .> ...... o v e T o o 1 n g 494--0434 "=====:=,;;;;"==I Pacific Newport 1-la.rbor .. .:::.:...:.:::.:.______ .. IMMACULATE APTS!
Sunken Iv rm. din. rm, 3 BDRM, 2 Bath, Lg. Fam. Laguna Niguel 3707 ADULT & FAMILY
view. OlhC'r rooms around Rm. Pool & maint. new cpt. SECTIONS AVAILABLE
pool. Exquls. furn . .$l500 / &: drps. Built.ins, frplc, ~ LEASE; .J Br. 2 Ba., Close to shopping, Park
mo. July I Aug. or yearly. sprnkl. $300/mo. 642-2718 Din. rm., blt·1ns, fam. rm. * Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba
675--2TI7 -3 Gorgeous view, Encl. patio. * 2 &-droon1s
-'='=°===========I:.> BDRM, ha. lge. ram rm, A... t 4..,,. .,,,.,0 . -elC'c kit .. 2 car J:ar, wlw .....,.en ,,., .. ££.JO * Swin1 Pool, Put/grocn
81lbo1 Island 2355 carpets, Country Club area BEAUT. Vic'v E.\'.CL 3br 2 * F'l"fll, lndlv/Indry fac'Js
R,
S315, letisc. 546-171..1 ba, bltns dshwr. crp/drps. 1845 Anaheim Ave.
l B Yrly or wntr Mature fp. S300 836/ST:ill 542-121:i C'OSJ'A MESA 612·2824
person. 213 / 6TI.J371 or 2 BR in cou:t-cpts .• drps. 673-5m wkods., stove. One 1nfant OK. no 3 BR, new, bu ilt.ins. drapes, • BEACH. YEARLY •
==========I pets. Ref's. $135. 546-1016 carpet.s. Lt"ase $250 mo. 3 Br 2 Ba. unf .~, 49.f..0724 • um • •• • .... <»>
Laguna Beach 2705 $225. 4 BR, 14' Ba, RIO. ,.:=.,"":.;,....,...-~-~-12 Br. 1 Ba. unfurn •••• $21 5
w/w, gar. children O.K. 4 BR 2 ba. view home. 3 Br. 2 Ba, den furn •• $.'50
2 BDR l 'ii ba. Adults. close I ,B;"';.:·,;-~=;::.,..---== I Pacesetter area, S250. mo + 1 Br, l Ba.. unf~m •..• S200 ~~T-l~.a ~~1:-4137 ii: SISO. 2 BR duplex! pr, RIO, util. 673--9$41 or 4954485 l ·Br. l Ba. turn .....• $275
-========I w/w, drape•. ChUdnm O.K. D I U I BURR WHITE
Summer Rent1l1 2910 Bkr. 534-69a> up •xes n urn. 3975 REALTOR
RANCH style, 3 BR, 2 BA. DUPLEX Unfrn. avail July 2901 Newport Blvd .• N.B.
PRIVATE room with bath, <-'PfS, drps, frp\c., bltlns, fncd 1. 3 bdr 2 ba built-ins incl. 67S46Jo 642-2253 !.V«:a.
sep trom mttln house. 1110 yd. Nr Har Hi $250. ~1189 dshwshr. flreplacoe. 1 block $127.SO. 1 BR. lcm't'r, w/w,
to 9/3, 6i3-S849 3 BR 3 BA. w/w cpts, dr:ps, trom beach. 6~1758 dral)l!i;, all ulll pd. Avail
BAYFRONT-Newly furnish-bit-ins. Upper Back Bay. DAILY Pil.oT DIME-A· ill. Bier. 5.14-$80
C'd 1 BR. Finest beach Joe. $285 mo. 64.2..()645 LINES. Yoo <'.an use lh~m S12U. 2 BR. w/w, children &
,-,•"'75-32_,-,::"::.·,,:67;.:l-OOOc..;:::.::'----IJT'S Beach hoUsfl time, Big· for just pennies a day. Dial i;n1aJI JX'I O.K. Brokt'r
LIDO JSI.E • Finci;;I J B.R. 2 i:cgt stlection ever! See tM 642"56711 534-6980
Batb. Nicf'>ly furni~herl. DATLY PILOT OU!ified THE QUICKER YOU CALL. For Daily Pilot Want Ads ==================1--'-""'°":..=::.."'::...;'-'75-;..7709.= __ 1_...,="°=".;.N;.:Oc_Wl..._ ____ 1THE QUICKER YOU SEU. Dial 642-S6'18
-·--------·----------~-------·--·-.. --·---
RENTAL~ I RENTALS ~ENTALS
Apts. Unfurnlshtd _Apts. Unfurnishtcf Apts. Unfurnished * * * * * *I REAL ESTATE
Gen1r1I
BUSINESS 1nd
FINANCIAL
Gtntral 5000 Newport Be1ch 5200 S1nt• An~ 5620 / r' dise Lots 61~1 8us. Opportunities 6>00
.( BOR. S ba.
l'N:f'{'alto11 &!"ff.
$210/mo. ~.2815
Cost• Mesa
f11m. nn.
v./ (iool
5100
HARBOR
GREENS
BACllELOR UNFURN.
from $110
ALSO AVAILABLE
1 • 2 & 3 BDRJ\f.
1Tea1cd Pools, Child care
Center, AdJ. to Shopp1n, -
No pets cJlo"'ed
2700 Peterson \\lay, a1 Har-
bor & Adam.!i. Cos1a J\lesa
54£.«170
BUCH
APARTMENTS
HIDDEN VILLAGE
GARDEN A.PTS. ONE 01 the Jut a.nd mo.;1
$1$ Monlh PU8 uW.; 2 Br. btautl!ul ftc·llimplc lots re.
furn . nr wilw·n. Air-cond., · , m •I n I nt: in DOVER
forcNI air Mal, heated pool, SHORE.S lot aale on Anti-33 )'t'ar old l'Ompany now C'\'·
PARTNER
I •~ -qua. Owner. 5-17--0997 parklint". Openlug of fl<'IY di. rec. arf"a, pr v. pal..,,
r1SH, SURf'. S\Vt~I QUIET ~IVING LARGE f<-2 Jot, 9000 i;q It vision creatt'1 unequalrd op-
''ln your O"'n hvni yard" ~IS2S ~ Can build 4 unlts, centrally pc111unlty for O\VNER·J\IAN-
F'catu1·inf priv1>te t'lUbhou.sc, locatro in JI u n I I ng t 0 D ACER. C0l\1PANY \VI L L ;;;:1~/'ri\ ~~ ~~~~ P;~~~I~ Laguna Beach 5705 .... •' _ A ._·' :~~~ S9500. ~1 by ~~N~~~ir: ~~~:
J\'editerr nean a.dull tlvirn:. !-----------"'-" ---~----~=--.1 \Vlll ingnl"llll lo ll"arn a musl.
2 BEDROOMS, 2 9,\TJ-IS 2 BR., unfl.ln1., \\'/pool. Whod'd'ya Want? Whiddy• Got? H·:l LEV~I. lot. QU.i wl 1st year inconie 1hould ex·
n-•-,__ 1 ll6<J Ile\\' 0'11izc-d dbl i:aragl" , _ _. -.ooo. II yh•c ••-rR0~1 $250. ...._~an v...,w, nr • ..,.-ac 1. .,..,,... -"" ,
INCLUDES J\·Jo, '528-ml e~I. l s 2 ; SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR stressed for a pts. By Ovroer availabJe immediately •nd
\l'HU.v.·all sHAC CarJ.lf'lnig, 199-230.11•\'l'-NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS S~.000 cash. 613-D<I ha\'I' $15,000 l'ash, call 213/
t;L b!l-ins 11·iih rerngcr· 1----------Speci1I R•tt 615o 437..G4.14 rxt. "4.
atot' & dishwashrr REAL ESTATE S Lines -5 t imes -S bucks R-;;':"';h;e~s;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;i ENCO
HUNTINGTON Generil 11utEs -•D Musr ,Ncl uoE • l-Wn•1 't'OU fMv• 10 tr•lle. :1--.....,•1 'J'Cl\I w•nl 111 tl•IM. l-IUl\fBLE 011.
ACIFIC ~YOUR l>l\One •nit/or •llO•a.•. 4-l 11~1 ot td~tlll••nt. THQROBRED 8' REFINING CO., p i-NDTHtNG FOR S•l!: -lll.t.OES DNLY! HORSE RANCH has well localed St"n.•iCf< sla·
UE PHONE 642-5678 1 ·1 7l\ C>CEAN AVEN ATI'ENTrt>N ton ava1 able in Colla t.tcSll. c~ blks \V. of l!.B. Pkor) NEEDED BY AUGUST To Pl1ce Your Trader's Paradis• Ad 160 acrrs or beautHul South· No investment requirrd in
R1ntals W1nted 5990
•
""'l"TI"4'J"5364"'"""61"6_,·
0
5.16-
0
"-148_,7-IEastrm Colll"ge professor l: f'lrn Calll. land with romplete gasotinc.11 motor, o'k til't'&, P.r1irt~d.don't rited lax shl"1· S9000 rq. In 50i.l•IO R-:t lot training. boon.ling, breeding hattcries I major at-crssor-
NEW SPANISH STUDIO apt. near water. graduate sludents, .soine IC'I'. \\'an! hse f"'e &, clr for \\'/gd l't'nlNI hSC'. nrxt lo &. la.,vup facilities. This is a i<>s. Humble pays all U!ili-
\/ILLAGE APTS. t.iiddle agrd gentlen1rn on-\\'ilh faniill<!s and/or small Jl9 Al or S3!I ?ti eq in Ir!· r:arden Grove Civic Cntr I:. \\'Orking hOrst' ranch with an tle11• For infonnation r all
1 & '.! BDRM. rurn or un-ly. fti·I.. patio. SIOO 1110. on pC't, deslrc housing near pl<'xes. S960. 1110, p o o I , I IS, 1otal vat. S20.;ioo, Tn:I estimat<'d replacen1t'nt cost Oiuck Matulik CTI<tJ 836-6661
r r ''I' I., •. Q,,._, 701 C''"n· U.C.T. sonu.• \\'Lil br locatPd 'm I 51" •-1 I ·1 ., 1-6169 Bk I · 1· f ·1·1· I P-d urn. Alr...i.'Ond, ctsh\\·hrs, sci ·"-,.... .... pn r °"· no vae. ............, ur uni s or . a •· · r. o 1.''<15 tng ac1 1 11"11 o a ays (71~) 5J5.9801 exes &
I , , h 1,.,, C<"•I. in thC' area appro.'\' 2 yrs, 11 ll2~000 Full k ('ran S: O\"f'n5, pallo, reak· v Tax Shrl!C'r '"eC'dcd : trad<' Tn1de 1939 Bui<·k, or -J11uxu11a e Y , <N, • ~-ee ends, ~~~~~~---I Nl't'd I IQ l &droon1 Ull· ,, . 1· k -;;;;;;"'"'"'""-c----~ fas! bars, 1u·iva1e runrtt'cks. \"EARL 'i 3 Br. 2 Ba, crp!s. furnislwd apts, duplexrs or s:t:.,ooo land equity in rar>-1961 ncnaulr CafkV<'lic for prll'<' '' 1thout l\'e sloe UNIQUE d" tr'b 1 ll'g sto1·~c l'loset!<. Ilea red <lrps, f1·plt'. nr ·ocC'an, $23:i 1,~·•··.·. 1,1.,._ '•"''"-11._. 1,, idly apprec. art'a for unl!i Oi;•vy Pnll<'l Sl.000.000. & l"as)' temis. 3 YNI Lo ~Sn 1wuillmlgl.:_-u,P•O•I ~"'I, satutas, ba1'-l>-11ues. ~• •. &'" --~"" "'" ·' '"' " 'b' "' " I 100' v•loo Fllr more Information call n--1·~ CM, r.: . ., ...... • • ··~ '""· w-->OIN. $150 pt-r month. 111igh1 go or bC'ach Pl'OP. O"'ll<'r Bos Glenn TI!om•'""'n, ou,. ·-, .r1u-9118 Sound proor walls, \l'alk tn ~-~-~.o-=======~I S]O niore 11 utihli<'s lll't' i76 Tusti n 5-14-3666 f'\'t'S. 642-5769 ........ BEE
1•losets, L'OV(!rt'd t'arporl. 8 k 8 5240 Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. R BAR It Piv.<1. \\'alk In AUul ls. lll'J Pfll~. ac ay paid. PleaSI' con I a c t : TO\\'NllOUSF. 3 Br. 21,~ ha. Rrn1rd houSf', 50:-<l ~O R-3 1818 \V. Chapnian Ave. coolt>r. Close 1o \Vhhcfront,
THF. CAL!f-O".N\•N ,.LNT lrn· .. hra>•I. vir\V', 2 &17-0010 HunLini:;tn11 Bc;u·h Bc;iul. apiil'd. Pril'. patio, ICo!. Nr. G.,arrlrn Grove Ci\500•\c 0 ,.,,,,,., c~•if. 0.1. Sac Jot• rash. 5-16-J:.W:l '"' .. ,. aflrr 6 Pl\1 lv lravc in-2 C"nlrr, O.JOO. Tradl' S9." 0 ' tu
Phone 54(>.2727 BR. 2 Ba., lrpl., c·p!s, hll-lorniation nr 11,ritr· R. ~~~-~-~· ,.~;:.~·~.:~~~~·~;.~~ X]IY for units or ? ? Oivncr/ 541-2621 Evcs-wknda ?tS-67'17 DOG Groon1 ing sho11 for
--TH.EG ABLES--ins, b1•11n1 ceiling~. hid. Eugene Gr<ini.:rr, l.'asr. 0 616-66._1 Bt'Okcr ~7-6,169_ _ sale. Corner Brmtd11•tty &
pool. Arlu!111, no p C' ts. • ll'n<'r J
6200
_N_o_11•port B_ lvcl, CJ\!. 6•12~818
A\·1uh1blr July :11~! llt'[t'l"f'lll"<.'S. Sl 7j. 5'18-4S45 \l'estcrn RPse1'\'C Un • v ., 2 BR. doll houS{' ii·/ht.lwd. Acreag0•--------I -==~=~=====-DI"'°'..! BR \vith gat·a~r Sl•l.i. Cleveland, Ohio. 44106 1·~ .:iailboat 3S' l'OOl11l'. lasl .. • sailrr S17 500 v· I + older ·1 floors. o11 sluu.lr.d R-2 lot, Laguna Beach Money to Loen 6320 Adulls ~ l'pts -drp3 · blllns . East Bluff 5242 Dr v r lop n1 r. n t Bioloi,:y · • a · FOR duplex or unils.
lrnc-M yard. "'a1cr paid. Center.) Br. hsc CJ\!, $l$.750 \'al. FORTJ N, REALTOR 7 ACRES W/PERMIT ts: & 2nd loans for quick ~·139 Oi·&ngC' A1·e. \\'ant con1m'l or indust. TO KEEP HORSES NE\V dh: ·rownhouse, 2 Br, ADULT Couple, no 1~h1l. no · C'I 6~ ~17 l70l·A \Vcstcliff. NB 642-5000 cash. Borrow on )'Our pl'» * 636-4120 * prop in n . l.>"'\.IJ 21~ Ba 5300. 3 Br. 2 Ba 5350. pr.ts. Lido l~lr hon1c ~let, l!AVE; Conn Minuet Or:?:lill, Adjacent subdivision one per1y eq 1vithou1 dis turhin,t
CLEAN-QUJE.-r ARE:\ ~ Br, 3 Ba S~9:.,, 752 Arntgos nl.'C'd rrntal !or 6 n10. !July Lotus Elite ne1-.:. yrllo\v 11\q. ol'iginal prict' Sl6CO. \VANT: n1ilc E. of hl\JI, Util avail. ~'Our low lntenst ls~ TDs.
3 BR studio, tll'1v 11·/1v r ptg. \\lay, N.8 . 67>50:U l ~\ while bldJ:", on Linda llC'I\' un•s \'alvcs ,f.: 1nl. '&t car !good cond.), Hobie $t.1,000. 11 Cash.balls\ trusl Al90 buyers fol' 2nd TD~.
drps, 21: ha. l'lr•r hltins. Nr Jsi{'. l\1usl ha\·r cm·I. i;ar. l\'ilri look~. perlorman<"e & sailboat or'!? 67a..6009 deed. \\'nte oi· t'Ontac1 : S.1Hlcr MO~iijl'e Co. Irie.
1'\1-y, aduhs pl"l.'f d 5-19-0412 Coron• del Mir 5250 673-862·1 o/30 n1pg. \\'ant jeep, {'arry .,,7.-ccc---co-=-~---,"""-) Grorat' R. Kress. Box 914, Scrvini;:: Harbor Area 20 yn .
• k -" oll P/U ., • "'"5387 28' f'airliner F. 8 . Ford Sr-1 nn .... o n-,-• _, ph"n" 136 E. 170, St. rvrs "' w C'uu!>. RESPONSIBL•-}'""O" W"Ck· 1-·--·-·-·------.._ .. ,,.. cc u i " " ~ r:. "" ,. " dan. 327 Cursader. Wanl 6 94-4726
UPPER 2 BR, JT[rig, rll'.'c -ing lady desire!!. unfurnished Nor1h Tustin Loi, $18,500. slC'cpcr F'.B Cruisrr, OC'i~I 4 · 642-2JTI 5i:MIG!l bll-in.~. i:losrd i,: a r a i,: r . ~ •v l or '.! bt'dnxim apt prrfet'· Frlf'{' & t'lear. niost excl. preferrt'<I, (-11sh diffrrrnl'C'. Take over pyn1ots. JO Acres ANNOUNCEMENTS Adult.~. no 1)('ts. reduced 1),. r .. rt~ ahly in N.B. !u $100 mo. are<i. fabulous vie,,.,·. Tr. for rTI4l 673-6T.!8 no do\\·n. S29 mo. Near ind NOTICES
rrnt 1r1 ('Xrhang!' for iltr ~ -""-""'--Inc. Pl'OJ)t'rty 1\·/sf)C'nd;ible. Lakr & City. 891-474.3 Ag!. " &" .,,. ===,~~---Bk • Snm11 horSI"' ranch 2 ER 1 -~ F d (F Ad I 6400 s;aruc111ng. 1......, ~ 0",' TEN ACR""""' LADY EXECUTIVE & sisler r. 547-6-169. -oun rH s . - ----" ~ ba, ga1·. lncd. \\'ant 3 BR 2
SllAHP large ~ Bit apt. 1 & 2 BP.. Furn l:: UnJum dcsi1·c 2 BR house or <Jpt JOOO at·., s~.ooo. 80 nii hath on la11!'.C lot Can add Exchanges, R. E. 6230 Sl\tALL bown dog, Magnol ia
June 27, 1969
'1NNOUNC•MENH
and NOTICES
P1rson•l1 6405
*Alone?
YES IT'S YOUR
FAULT
For 1~CtJ1'tled 11\t'uaJ'I" lhal
\I'll! change your Jlf(' call
0RANC8 C'O. 5'47-6667
24 hour l"CC-Ording
ORJVER or pa.s.<wngt>r of
XKE Which entcrt'd Ba.I
Port shop'g center 111· Kadak
l1ln1 sta from P.Csl Hwy
approx 7 pn1 Thurs ·19-June.
Please ronlacl &12-..1687 alt 6
pm. Could prove re. ..... ·ardinc
LICENSED
Spiritual Readings. advice
on a.11 matters, 312 N.
Camino Real, San Clt'mC'n1e
492-9136. or .(96-9:)()7
10 A~1 -JO P~t..
SPECIAL $2 READING
Attr•ctive Expert
YOUNG \VOMAN
dancer \\'ill ~ach you all
lalest steps. Call Ardell
213: 591-4538 1·10 Pl\1
BLONDE 1vig t'O:'I S250 sell
for $75; See at garage sale,
Saturday, 2282 Redlands Dr.
N.B. (off 23rd St. bef\\'t"Cn
Santa Ana Ave. & Tustin)
COUNSELING
May save }'()Ur marriage or
fa1nily. Cnll 67~2300.
llrs 10 am-5 pn1.
I \VJLL not be responslble
for any debts other than my
own. Rona.Id Joseph 1-olorad
6/26/69
PORT~R~A~I T=s~.-646-4=~54-1
Chor<'oal, "'aler rolor, Oil .
By J. P .. ?ilac\\lillan
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous
Phone 5.f2.72'17 oa· writ@ to
P.O. Box ll23 Cotita Alesa.
Announcements 6410
PIANO LESSONS
Beginning s tuden1s prrr.
U.C.I. l\1usic Ma.Jot'
Call Bruee 546-44if!
CARPET • VINYL • TILE
Uc contl'. Fttc e11lmates
60-140.1 540--'fE
Electric1I 6640
ELECTRICIAN. no j.Jb tocl
sn1al1. !''or 111-ompt !if'tvic,.-c
t'Ull ~~14
ANTHONY'S
646-194B
'611
The Best. l'Osls no n1orc11
Experienced ?i1alntenall0l,.
Budget Landscapinc ~·
Graduate l~orticulturid; ,
JIP..T 'S GardC'ning &: La""
l\1 ainlenance. R.esident!.81;
c 0 Ill ni e r c I II I • \\"''""!:!
Ne\\·port-Cosla Me~ utj,
5'18-8411
ALLEN BROS. .. '•
GARDENERS STUDE1'£l'S
worklng \.\'aY thru ~
Exp. Lk . Reas. 6-fG..4203
JAPANESE Garden ln•i;
service and mainlena:nc.\',
Also clean up. •
• 5't8-2572 • '
• i\fOW • EDGE * WEEg .
Prof. lawn maillt by capati~
College students. Reu? .. 1
Kalina Brothen 646-12.~•
Rr liable lawn ~?'Vice, ~
1now, ed.ge, trim. 1..; * 5.11-1404 *
642-4.TiiG
Rrliable La~-n Malntena~
Gan:len\J\i' and Clean-~
AL'S Gardening Se r v I~'. La"'" maintt>naflC('. gardCn
Ing & clean up. 646-3629 '
Cul .r. Eq:e La"·n -
?ilalntenarlCC'. LiC'C'nscd
54M808/645-2310 art <(
CLEAN-UP Specialist! P,ie""·
inr,, edging, odd j o b S '.
Reaso1111ble. 548-6955 ~
JAPANESE gardenrr Co"I~
srrv. ExJ)f)r, dependahl :,
h'l'C' C'S1. 642-<fJ.S9 j rlrps I rpl s. bit -ins. Quiel Frplcs I prlv. patios/Pools. w/ privacy, unJurn. Yearly froni dn1wn LA, 5 min. rash. 1800 Ni•1vpor1 Bl. Cl\1 1 Adams, Oii•ncr please
bldg. Adu\15 only. $14:)/mo. T . C tnt1 Bk! t t rental. Corona-Nr\vport Sch from fwy on paved rd. bhi·n Hllr 6l6-J~ rvr 64,1-!655 Property Problems? identify. Call 962--0729 after S.16-4974 aft 6:30 or \vknds. 1.ennts • on s' pu · area. 871-2100, exl 1022 Exchange what you don't G &. H OJo'FSET Printing Johnson's Gardening • ..;.
(discount on order 200 & over) '.finf'sl equip., cxper1 c I"" ,,....,,rn. SC'aumont l:. Oak Glen, Trtl t..,1i...,r hous" ·t-inr.on1,. ..J-d 4:30 PJ\f ..... ... .. " .. , • \\'ant for property you o ' 7 ===---,,-----1 BR, util pd, rice hltns. 900 Sf"a Lan<, "-"i'lt 644-26ll LOCAL businessman. 2 for it\C. prop · 547-6469 Bkr. """'"' 1• bll>l•I. 0,, "Oii "PRICOT 11 ......,. '"'"' ,, .. 11·an!, Call for Appl. " poot e-11u11. uo J]7 tl Riverside, NB 642-0020 ~nntini;:. clean-ups. 962-
rrfrig, 110 childn.'n or JIC'!Jl. I.MacArthur nr. Ct>ast Hwy) grown sons need 2. J BR 3 Br, convert den. lrplc, J~i. t•oursr, Tradr for fr<'c & 0. D. COLE ta~s. Vic Tc\Vinkle Park,
Nr .shoppini; 6•lG-6222 hl'lore I ~![!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!J!~~i!!!!i!!I apt, Nl\'P1 Hgts area. Call Ba vic11·. Glendalr home. cleat• land or suh111i1. ~,,1~.<ll\-lt Rf'altor 6f,.OOJO CM. CAii to identify.
·1. SO Of HIVY , 3 BR, cpls. -'"_ ... _,,0<_1_,_,_,_s--~-~--$37,500. SIO,iOO ('{JI)'. for lo-l\lad~c D;n•is Hlrr 6'12·7000 --· -----------LI 8-0570
FURN ,t. unrl11·11. bach, I & 2 drps, gw-, nr n1kt & bch. 2 BDR yc.,1,·. J\larrird. no ... ~• -'"pl-,, l•om", "· '·'"· R E W t d 62401~==~-~-----.. tu '"' ~ ~ \Van! free & cl ear vacan! • • in_ e YOUNG malfl puppy, part BR. Mesa clcl ~·Ja.r Apts. !¥.IS $250 lsc. Adults, no pcls. rhild: near \vatcr S150·S17::i Myt>rs 673-67~ land an"'uhe,• U.S.A. "''' -;;;;;;;:;;;;;;,;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;;,1 "·· .. d l~l Ca1nino Dr.. C. M. 614-42:07 111J. furn or unJurn. 645--0673 ~ ,. ' • V<!rntan :Sht>pllcr • w c l I local, in1pr'Ovl"d, lrained, houscbrkn Brown &.
:'>16--04jl. DUPLEX 2 BR, frpl. Crou11d alt ;,, GIBSON Les Paul model: f.ladg1• Davis Rcahor h' VI >I I I nd , B R 2 n N I . U 1 S"" ===-~-~-~--ne1\• Savage 308, lever 111•• ~· lie. e c1vport s a . _ D , ba, rrpl.~. clrp~. r . r. s 1oppu1g. n. ~~ OF.SIRE to lrasc Rr1n1blic or 641-7000 $$ MO ( S $$ 673-M55 II I P. 1. & --30, lion; 13' aluminun1 canoe. ~~~-RE A H bu1ll-ins SllO/mo ll:.1rbor-a 1nc11n · Assoc.6 iJ-4,,,_ P<1ce!'.c1trr Hon1r 111 Eslan-W 'll d----Balicr area.~ rta Hi boundaries 1.2.:; yrs. TRADE for ho.al, n1otor, nr I tra e 1961 VW BOSTON bull n1lxed, len1alc,
B lb S300 '!' ~ 499-1531, cvrs & l\'kncl~. Sedan for Bus or Van. approx. p :, ~rs. Vic.
B""'U1'. I"" ·• "" •. 1,,, •. , --•--•-'--------I OR ::-8120 4-6 For Your Hotnr Equily . . 1 "-" .. ~ ~ or. •~ -* ~>~S-3821 • A" .. -I I I Fntrvic\v Rd. k Wl son . ... ,. I d I $ TED 6 * <JSu u Cy no f'O.'\I . , . s!uuio, poo, auls. lX). ~lODl:RN 2 BR, 2 Bath,\\'AN :appiv"< niosin * * * * Oplor Trad(",LkArro11hcatJ toyou1he&>llcr! f.lay::0.5'\8--60S9cvcs only
2l!O San!a Ana. 645-2911 frplc, 11•[rig. Steps to OC1?an Eastblull. 3 BR, 2 BA. l\'111 trade: 4 Cf'lnl".t<'ry lvl-'>, l11a lc1 $14,500. rurn'd. 2 sly 12 ycari> of paying mol'C' ca.'lh ?i1ALE black dog:, cocker
2 BR Duplx, frpll'. l"rpts, &. b;iy, Yearly $265. 6i3-1990 Family/& flC'l. 1 11 3 1 Harbor Rest, Costa t-.1e5.l.t • nu1d, ulil's. \Valk to 1<tl'f'11n1. 101· Orange Counly pl'OpC'l'ty. mix. Vic. Santa Ana Ave. &:
n1ec location. Sl•UJ. 11!J9-.3fi67 -===========1_''7~6-24)8 for 5ail bo~1.,· ~811ue $1300.00 lake. Ccdilr Ciltn Vlll. SiroO Call thfo RPst . . . Santa l!!a.bel, Cl\1. 645-07:;9
aflrr 6 11m. Balboa Island 5355 e LANDLORDS e " hal 6'~',. r.;-, 1no's. 538-481'.i Thrn call \hr Brsl ------1 _ _ ----_ BIK£, Raleigh, 3-spd. Blk LARGE; 2 brir Ouplf"x, Adulls FREE RENTAi. SERVICE llon>f' Lovers! 3 BR ho111r. I' I · I bl I 18-0 Pl ,,,,,·-V'-w 0-1,. Slat•' &
I ._1 NE\\/ 'l BR apl. Elrr l'r\f Brokrr 5?.l-69S2 :"O rs.s1on;1 I g, I a· " ,... "' .,._ , ~n y, .:..f..j' Pacth1·, Cl\!. cltan·g O\•('n, d s h 11, h r .l ~~c. =.~--~-~-~ »irn, t'Orral, riding arena 1•rnt1;;i, C.:'.\f. ~lany Uo;f'S. BEVERLY JACKSON P.listy, llB. 841-8109
.tl&-6066 ii·a.shcr/dryC'r. lrplr, crpts, \YANTED by couple: 1 or 2 lack room ere. 1'., alTI', $6 1.~I()() \•;11., ~21.j()Q C'<[Urly, BLUE-Point s·c;,-m-,-.,-.-,-n-,c-1,,
2 BH. Duplex. \\'a1f'r ll.."lid. \ d"j)s. On Grand Cana.I Lit-Br. houst'. by Aui:. l~I. S37,000 cq. Trade for /and, All ryprs n( prop 1·ons1dcrrri REALJY fully grown, \\lcstminstcr
child OK. $lj(J, No prt~. Nr. Ile Bal. Isl. Boat d0::king GoOO l"f'~. fi73-7~9S con1m. Submit 642-&187 Bkr. 0\1nrt1;igt ·1!14-9171 ari .. ·a. 894--1663
11rk & srhl. 5ll!-OO~~il privil. No pels, no chilUren. OCC student from Pakistan .. * * * * * Sl\fALL Dog. Vic Grahamn
J BDR S9~i/nin. r-.1aturc RE'is f'{'q . srio mo. 67.3-3328 in1rres1rd in livin~ wi th "!!~!'!!'!!!!"l!l'!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~""'~!'!!!!!!!!!!I!!! 8•7-6033 or 54S.824& I· Edinger, H.B. Call 10 adul1s only. Ne11·ly painted. An1rrican family. 642-8229 ;; Identify 847--0192
&12·1801 Huntington Beach 5400 I-BR., 1~"0rking nian, good REAL ESlA"rE REAL ESTATE -· 1 1 u Gtntr1I Gener•I I ~~:'l"'!'!~~""~""'""""'.I Bl.UE Parakeet vicinity San-BEAUT lgc 2 BR. I ~~ ba 2 BEDROOM 2 BATll, rcferrnces. ?Ju y st. _P to ----------1----------CASH: QUICK-nc!.'d 3 or 4 1.11 Maria SL, F.V. 842-71).14
shtr!io, pool, adults, 5155. F"URNTSHED & S90. &16-388-or S46-L38J Income Property 6000 Office Rental 6070 Br. G.I. or FHA house near BICYCLE. Vlc. Snntn A11t1 &
:?310 San111 Ana. 6-1.1-2933 UNFURNISHED R;;s for Rent 5995 -----------1------·----· hrrc. 499-1948 &lnt;i lsa))(-1. 2r-.1. !i1.-.....07J9
Cris. drape$. buil1ins, he~t 7X GROSS BEAUTIFUL Pr1vatC' ollirc PRIVATE Par!y \\"ants so1a!! -Mesa Verde 5110
2 BR. \1/w 1·rpt 'g, dn1r>es.
Al; bilns. Near shopping
l'cn!rr. SJ.~:; mo. Adull!!i on-
ly. &12-Z'.8!1
Newport Beach 5200
lrx:alion, l blk to 5 Points LADY or student : lg bdr util. 6 Unil~ \\"Ith a good rental \\'tlh b<ll h. !>IO!llr OC•'an v1c1v, arreagr in N.F.. San Dic1,.'0 Lost 6401
shoppirl,!! clc. lroni $l:l0. priv. bHlh. nt'al' Coldeu rPl'()rrl. Ocean side or Balboa in rhc Glendale }'rd. ~'IV· rounty. 549-1086 )"-'-"--------'-"-'
7i01 Ellis, apt. V . 6'12-2Sl:), '-"'<'lil Col. 893-Sl73 SS:ihnn. Blvd. Nr_ churehcs, ocean &-lngs Bldg. <.:oivna drl Mar. =os===-------1BOY Who found & claimrd
842-8303 --ba •-h G--" . 17-1 C II E I BU INESS •no mans \vatch 11! y . C , LARGE. Pnvatr entrancr. Y ..... :ae C-'>. ""'' 1nvcs1. :i nio. a ~ v «' Y n FINANCIAL
In I A k. 11~ OOll II lh kk ,--°'II -----------I rarnival plit rclu rn lo P.O. CHEZ ORO APARTl\1.ENTS
823~ Atlanta
l\e1v l·'..! Br<lroon1it · Pay ~
electric only
\\'orkini: 1ncn only. 646-7J0.1 en. s 1ng .w, . 1 a rn ,,,...,,.,. · or
•-ro-2."." BURR WHITE :,.i~Jl(i.'l B 0 1 6300 box 2102, Newport Beach. ·~ .. .~ __ us. pporfunlt es Sent. vnlur
RE \LTOR 334:0 Nl\VPORT BLVD. ' PLEA~"E \VATOI for small ?901 Ncwpor1 Blvd., N B. Office!! su1rabll" for Com· 1nctal magic t'Oins & Irick!!
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Babysittil'lg 6550
WIU., BABYSIT. My ho1n1•.
NiCC' play l'OOm & fcnt'i.'CI in
ylU'd . Only lunch lurni~hPtL
Near Westcllff shoppirig:
area. Call 548-4338
CllAI•ID\\iOTHER 11•ill gi\·e
ln\'1ng care !or 2 St'hl-agc
chldrn, hlr. h&'11•ork &
cook';. Live In. A·l rrls.
893-122.'i
TEEN-AGE girl d e s i r c
baby&it1ing any hour ~.
Reliable & expc>ricni.:ed.
54a-6151
\\I EEKLY Babystttin~. llrt"f.
baby or up 1o :1yrs. lf.'3. 111
my home. 892--6301
TEACHER will babysil niy
home !i days a week,
Nr\vport Shores. 6•12-9610
EXP 15 yr olrl y,•an!s Jive.in
babysi!l ini; job, 11un1mcr
n1os. 213: ~4&-4270
\VANTED, ba'-ob-y-,";1C1;-,,,--m-y
home. \V/lakc infants uri !o
2 years. 158 1-olagnolia. C.i\I,
Brick, Masonry, 1tc.
6560
BU ILD, Remodel, Rep;ur
Brick, block. ~oncr c ti:,
crpntry. no job loo small .
Lie Contr. !J62.6!)>1."'i
1\"t:Ar. occiin. dpb:. }r!v. 3 :136-::927 or 5::6·2~7 ur. 2 ha, priv pal. bl1n~. J>ool-\Vash<'rs-Dryrrs Q
11 /Iv t·pL rlrp~. Nn pets, Private G3rages
!\ICl:: clean roon1 !or r"Chablr
cn1ployl'd 1nan. $12 per
11cck. Costa l\lcsa. S.12-'i9'20
Mis c. Rentals 5999
6Ta-4630 671-ll8:J9 Eve~. mcrcial, ?llC'dical. Denial
Air<nnd .. t·rpl~. rlC'vator INDUS. Bldg. 100•,., occpct. 3 p~ SQ
N "-h I . k "'"' .FT.
BUDGET
RENT-A-CAR
t.· reels ol hon1r n1ovie Business Service 6562
flln1s. ,..-o qur.i1tlon.." askL'd.
111111.~-unly. S2T." ni o. 2 BORi\1, l level Con·
612-!l lR:°> dom1niun1. \\'asher/dryer, FULLY enclosed garage for
storage S20 pcr tno. Cati
~..!S-2921
GOLD l\Icda!l1on. 1 BR 2 b.'1,
l'PIS, drps. patirt Sl!i~ k Slij
Lsc. 4232 Hilar ia \Vay Ph.
21:1/!lSl-70~9,
l'nrl pa!io, all rrr lacilit1es.
· r1:1 Adutls !lbS-139·1
NE\V Sl.'iO up. l-2·3 BR. Ilea!· STORAGE garage for rent.
rd & sauna pools. rec rin. Alley act'C's~. Np1. llr1;hts.
!lr1l & A!;onquin. l\l;r. Sl~l !148-0680 al!. fi.
S~fi-~137 -
NE\V n1odcrn l or 2 BH. Income Property 6000
cpl s. drps, a va\l July J .
:;J6-2379 ----~-~~1 l!'s Beach house 1imc. Big· EASJSIDE DUPLEX
prt. °" . o~. net relurn. S4J.5Q?.2 OR 675-2-IG4
S190.000. Phil Su 11 i 1· a n 5-llH761 :116 Upfll'r 291h N. Bch.
1-"0R SALE BY Q\\iNEP. Artisl i-tudifl. '.? r no n1 ~. north lite, 111.!ar buy $T.1. 4 11ni1s. '! · 2 BR. 1 BA & !'cllirorcr 67:J...16:il
2-3BR, 11 ~ BA. ~l4S..6J;i:-1 NE\V dt'luxc olnc:e space!!.
Business Rental 6060 I' 320 10 1200 sq It at Santa
-----------Anu J-"v,•y & Ctll11·11 V11l\cy
STORES Jor lease Villi.gr 1urnotf. 8.11-1400. 499-4J9a.
Shopping Crn!cr, •-OI" or El RENT Ole.. amplcPrkr::.
Ca111ino & l\lcndoza, C.!\1. tiusy Joe. 2340 N1vpl Bll•d,
Sulltiblr J-"ood to Go, TV, C,'\;1 S7J. &l6-2.'.J4•1, !H8-ll:l33
\'arie!y, hobby shop, etc. -----
Rrv.·a rd. 675-40~1! S,\l\lPLE injC'clion moldini:.
Mo"1or TWO . Black Male _ Labrador Designing, tooling & pro-ctuction on sample h11sis.
Orangr County Expansion Rctrirvcr!I one l.J mo olrl. PriC<'S to help you. 548-21:12, o"·ner-~lanagin~ Parlll<'rs .'!On 2 n10. RC\\'ard, C0~1 T
wan!l'd 613-5"j(J I c='='-''c·-"-'c'c· -~--~-
\Vilt !rain . an1bitio11s. di'di· l\~INlATURE t·ol!ic, tri t'OI· JOB shop/1nachinc ~hop.
i:11tcd nicn & "'Omt•n \Vho or, R n1os, lost Junr 1·1 \'IC c.:an hnndlr busy & OVC'l'load
.'lrek a rha1Jcnrc k. want lo Hrookhnrs1 &: Adains, JJB. work. \Vood. mC'tal, & pla~-tit• \\"ork. Jent Enl, ~IS-2152 h1v('st lfinant'iflll)' .r.: person. RC\\·arct. !IG2-fil16
ally) !11 a dynamic gro1vlh BICYCLE, Pavil"ll"o-0-,-,-,-01,
business. P.cople 111ho wa n! Tan<lrni. ~chii•inn. blue w/
io hccor_11e involved as _own-chrni fndr!I, no q u cs.,
r..r·-work1ng partner~. \V11l he 67:;....1::0::
t'\'CS.
F. C. Rookkccp1ng Srrv.
Frei· plcku11 & delivery.
Refs. RC'llS. 817-8202
Yiunauch! Garden Scrvkeo
Fl"\.'f! Li1ndscape CnnsulliR4
• 673-1166 . ·'
1;;XPEltT-Jar1ane~r n1aif!
1r.nancc J.1.R.. F V, arcL
c.:au l\fack. S.11-8'142 :
Japanese Gardner ~'"
Exper, c.'Ompl yard servlct;!
Frer t>sl . 5·18-7958. 54f.>.07Z41
*Expert Japanese':
rINF.ST \\10RK 64G-0384 '
Hauling ·~ GENERAL HAULING
& CLEANUP '
St.! p<•r 1oad . 9624'6
HAULING, clean-ups, -
go1rage~. cli:. Lri:: u·11dJi
htt1xlyn1an. anylln1c. Call
BOB &~2X""J6 "' ·
HA UL IN G , pai1111iry
houst"clean i11g. You nan1e •n
Wt' do II! &t2-J398. _ .. '
YARD/gar. clnup. Rcn1o.vc
trees, ivy, dlrt. tl'llclor bw;l(
hoe._gi:ading. 962-8745 .. ~
B & G Hauling ServiC.
flC'aSOll<Jbll!. 6•12·140.'I I
Housecl••ninq
MAINTENANCE • rl'!lideit-
li11I 8: commercial. \vindoWzi
our specialty. Xlnl work,
1"('11.'l! Refs. &12-9-146
-HOUS EC LE~A~N7.l~N~G-_-I
Reach area p~rerrcd.
E:>iC"ellC'nl H.c[ercncC'S.
962-4173 : ... 13-50.18'
CARPITS, \VindOW.!i, lln
etc. Res or Comc'l. XI.a'.
v.·ork Reas! Refs. !'"148-4111 ..
Insurance 6770
LAGUNA
'1 privatl' orr1ccs "all 9-t;
11111•1". s nm c hcau1iful,!f''
fu rntshl'..'rl! North Lagun:t
hlg hwa,v ]()t;arlon. Excc1JC61
ror indlvirlual, rcellorll, Jn .. ;
surance b111kl'r, .secrrlarlal
offirr, !'Ir. Ownrr, 4g.1.55n ,
2 BJ~. uni. t\cw c·pr~ k r!rps.
\\"<1lk lo hc:irh. ~1:-J \'r•arly.
\r111Hrrd L. Foss ai:;l.G~2-:IS:10
I & 2 BJ:, 11pls. fur11 & Un·
Jurn, SlGj Jn $200 yrly.
Anita .. Jonrs Rily. 67:1-6210
I BEDR!\·J. cq >t. rlrps. bu1ll-
i11.~, pa1io. J\(lults only. r!Q
f'H'ls. Sl40 mo. yrly. 673-!12>7
NEAR Occan-u11pcr :: AH. 2
Ba., Jri11t-. S22~1 nio. i'l'arly
l~r. 49S-212ll
gest select.ion ever! Se<' the
DA ILY PILOT Oassi/icd
st>rllon NO\V~
Oul of 1011•n (l\\'nrr say~.
"SELL !~!MEDIATE
LY." i::'<crllrnt :I brlrn1
llonir. DINING ROOl\.1,
flf'{'p\att. t'arpc>ts cl('.
PLUS s1•paratr inco111c
uni!. Gond location.
J\IAl':E Qt-FER. 5~: '.i.
loan 1·an br a~~umf'd -
paynlCnls S1J~ p c r
nionrh includr lto1r'I -
AskinJC $29.!YJO SUBi\1JT
ALL OFFERS! t
St•r Liquor slort• ror kc\". 300 Sq. f-t. Offict
Al \V11gner 213/981:..ailO COSTA J\1ESA 646-21.10
~warded 11·l!h sulary, '6.l'J -. ----~-.~
car & 25'1~ of proffl-'>. Invest· Sl\f Ek'1i:;C' pood!r, male, bl k Carpe11t1rin9 6590 Janitoria l 6790,
Pl.ACE your "'u.nt ad whcrC'
thC'y llf{' looking -DAILY
Pl.LOT classified 642-.56i8
Costa Mesa 5100Costa Mew 5100
CONSTRUCTION JUST COMPLETING
HARBOR HEIGHTS Jour
LUXURIOUS 2 & 3 BEDROOM APTS.
e Firepl11rc~
• Dish\\'11.Shr-r
• Spacious cabinets
•Gaiters &: Sattlers
gas built-ins e l\1a1nn1oth rnastcr
hedrooms
• '.! BRthrooms • Balanced J"IO\l'Cr hvll1i;;
• Crntra' l0r1·rd
alr hcalln.-
HARBOR HEIGHTS
• !':ncloscd pa.rkin.i:
• Carpeb & drapes
Jour
l~cntal l\lanas:cr-~lrs.. Chl'ist.tcnsen
3117·A C innamon A¥e., (.ost• Mts•
( l hlock ""'Ht ot Harbor Bh·d,
'}blocks 1oulh or lhe San Dlc:;o freC\\ll) l
Phone ~1034
I. COATS &
WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pen Evenings!
Balboa Island
Storr or offif'<', 1v/\v carpC'I~.
$150. Bkr. 6·12-!l:l.J.""1
• PRl;\fE RC'tail I.oration •
17X40, Xlnt foot & auto lr;if.
lie. 1S71 Har bor, C i i
64~1
FOR LF:AS!:: store 23~-il.
AIMI off ice S,18ce. 33.1 E.
17th St. CM. 64~-24 ~0.
543-5508
LEASE -:JOxlOO c.-onunercial
bldg, hear1 or 1k111·n10"'11
C.M. !"~18-:t,101 or :J.llhl270
LO\VER floor. \l'ood-p;i"nr:;(.
1200'. Ideal ror d11nclng, arc
St'hool, ~!udlo. 541-5697
7 Unfts c .2 Lot ===--=====
$G6u 1110 inconir. 1:::1.1·.:llcnt Offict Rent1I 6070
JKJICntial. SS!l.000
Choice E 'side 4-Plex
I
Ncar ll th Street. :l • ~ BR
I ba I.· l·l BR 2 bath \\•ilh
ril"l"placr. All uni1~ h11vr
I
tnnlt • in11, 1'pl~ I drps, pvl,
paliol, Clll"lgCA. S!JS,50()
$32,000 Triplex $340
i\fonlh l'IC'Ut' Jtar•biir Cf'nler.
2 DR l ha, bit-IN, 2 Jl\'I pa.
hos, 3 aar. Call quickly on
this!
Bnb Olson Rllr. JIO-~.SSO
1.3 Nr:W UNITS neat ocean
llntgn Bch. Sun tl<."Cks,
paUos, 4 frplr.
TERR\' REALTY
.iJ6.1 lj!I Eve. 5.16-iG.'1.ll
3-2 Brt, 1-2 g11r. CIO!I(' ln.
Inc. S40.i. i11L~I llt'll. tiel·
llf'mcnt. Prine. only $3-t.OOO.
M:l-OO:r.l F:\·cs.
LAGUNA BEACH
Air Conditioned
C)N Jo"URES'i AV E.~UE
Dttk &pa cPs available l.n
new@St office bwlding 1:
prime location tn downtown
L.agun1 Belch. Air condi-
tioned. clll"pf!ted, bf.autiful
panelt'd partitioning. T w o
enlnlncet: Frontqe on
ForeSI Ave., rrar ll"ads to
P.Tunc1plli µ111tir11 Iota. S50
per month for 1p1ce. Desk
ind cb1ir1 1vallab!e tor SJ.
Bustneu boors f.t\Swerlng
service 1valloble lor $10.
All uftlltln paid u.cept
telept.one.
DAILY PIU'Jr
2Z2 FOREST' AVENUE
LAGUNA BEAQJ
491·M6
ClrARGE y-our w;i.nt td now.
Find It 1vi!h 11 1\•ant ~d!
--------------
Commercial 608S
IDEAL LOCATION
Ful: span itlucco 5IOl'C' build-
ing:, .1'.?XllO: good rondilion.
1'.! fl. l'(.'il1ng, nl'..'on l11;ht~.
hra1in.<?. noor 1frain.~. :l rest
rooms. Loi 60XISO lu alley.
ParittllJ:' 10 rars. Ne"•por1
llJvd. 111 Santa l.~:ihC'I.
JOHN MACNAB
RF.ALTY CO,
&12-8~3;, or .HS-Illa;;
OFFICES-FOR-RENT
~lodcrn, ~p11cious. prolcs~1on
at on monlldy basis. Avail
811169. Con!ar·t !\Ir. Lapp,
Downry S & I. A~soc. l\11~
~ion Viejo. 837-4911
Industrial Rent1I 6090
TRAILER-boat mlg. ctr.,
14000 sq. fl, Bldg. dock of-
11('('" P1(' 011 J 11 fetll'CIJ
acres nr. R<'fllandll fwy. 5
cl~. It, Schworer Bkr.
1>7l-26S4.
UNDER t.'On5ln1c1ion 28.000
r;q. n. ~1.1 bldg 1v/ofl~s.
l ZJ0.5000 sq. fl. units. lOc
Ml· It. Conipletr 11.bout Jul)'
15. [\'CS 616-0081, dayl
646-!"!033
f'OR Rent or l.caM": Wt
120Xl40, t'Omplctely fen<:«!,
suit. !or i1lon1gt, F-.1-1 itu.,.
Int". Sl::,O l\.1onth. 54-S-63()4
NE\V Industrial bldi,:. 2500 MJ.
I!. !le per ft. 1639 f.tonrovia,
C~L 67l-:JIH7
iFffiusr &Ile 111 P.f-t, 1i1.t \V.
l71h St., O f. 3:llXI sq ft. S3Zi
n10, M$-ll:l..1. F.:\'rs fi42.--14T!I
n1C'n1 l'C1utncd firsl year. rnr~. Lo~t las! Tue.~. v1t•
Birch k Ell is, r.v. fiC'\\·ard .
968-~2j Vrank V, Bianchini
64;">-0210 1-'V Small do~; blond and J!!!~••••ll[l••!!!!!!!!I 11·hi1r. red ha1·nr.,s. nAtflr
PARTNERSHIP ilf'1·man; llE\VARD
!-;f.fl VICE BUS INES."i ~2-1:!08_~------
PLANS EXPANSION ADULT Al!crt'd nl a Ir,
~1ahlished over 12 yrs. Ana· sh/hrd solid blue c11L
hcin1 N0\1' grossing over \V-sidc, CM. Rew: ~~7
~9.i.000 with $27.SOO yrly prof-OLIVE Cl'('f'n Ladies \Valle!
'.t. . . Vic Bristol I: Paularino
Nl.'rd amb11lous \\'Ork1ni:; par1-aiurt:h. Rcii·nrd. 67~73.'.'.(i
t1rr ""ho can lnvE"st Sll.000 i·a~h for ~~ owrienhip 1rully SMAl.L blk/wh fcn1 ca!. 4
~reo1Trl1. QuaHCicd prrson \\'h p1t1v11, yrl101v l'Ollnr,
\\•Ill 1lra11• equal salary +-Balhoa. I~I. J~ ~_!JI-SJ~
all olhrr bcncfil~. Gro\\•lh LIGHT blue fcnrlrr i:kirl.
plan could double present RE\VARD ~
volurn(' & p1-ofit!I within Ill 5,l(i-1240
nion!h.'i. Gl'C'i.t oppo1•\unlly, tAT-Blk adult nio!r vcllO\V
books open. Plensc phOIM! collar whl 8po t lrfl '11:nl leg any cYc a.lier 6 pn1 , , ' ~
1213) 592•1560 Enstblulf Rroa. O.l~--0 .. All
---------BHO\VN t:: 1vhl n1alc tlor..
HELP!! doxy body & lrl'rlrr f11cc.
NK1inn11l Co. 11rrtl., 11 Nr. E:lli11 I:. \\'11rd. 008-;j2jf
11lstr11lutor lor candy anrll.,==========
~nacks in Cosra r-.trsa or Personals t 405
nearby acras. P e r 5 o n -
SC'lce1ed niu.~t be able t·J e COUPLES e
dev.,tc 2 to 10 hOurs pr1 e SINGLES e
l\1'l'k (days or r\·esl 10 Tired of Bars, !\tall i· Ill Co!;I
n1ake \'Cry hi:;!i rnrninsr.=. computer clubl: JOIN THE
You may keep yoor rptsenl F'UN! TllE IN CR0\\'0 -
po1dOOn. No !iellini.. S\6~ DIV, OF T.~1.P. l\fttt olhen
coM rt-qui~ (SC't'urcdl. with YOUR lntcrcs11 at our
t"or lmn1l'lliale ln!crvicw in wttkly parties Or JJt!l~I
your al'ea send name. Ad· ltlcm individually &. IOALS
d!1'SS ltnd phont nambC'r 1c1: join FREE i can Le11h 1-9
ROUTE DEPARTl\lt:i'.-r p.m. 63:).9.'t?O.
JJ!} Box ~ RIDE \\'anttd OCC 10 Coron."\
Pon1on11. Otlllornla 'l17ti9 del ?I-tar, rve!I. \Vilt p;cy.
\VANTEO: off-ea.le liquor Call 67'".,....t 735 aft 7 pin.
lil't'nse., Orange County, 'M·IE QtnCKER YOU CAU..
Cnll~ ft,1~~ TllR QUICKEi\ YOU SELL
CARPENTRY \VALLS. \Vlrxlows, floor$,
t-.11NOR REPAIRS. No Job t·arpcls. Commercial 1.:
T<X" Small. Cabinet in gar-r"'Sidcnl iRI. Daily, \VCCkly
ages &. othe r cabinets. and/or !\lo. 897-7350
~175, If no answer leave
mag at 646·22i1. 11. O.
An0C'TSOll
R.EPAIRS, ALTERATIONS
CABINETS, Any size job
2:i yrs. exper. 5'18-6713
REPAIR, Pa11ilions, Sn1alJ
Rcn1odC'I, rh•. Nitr or 1lay,
Reas' C111l KEJ\ ~679
~===~ ------CARPENTHY · rl'p:ur.~ •
Cubincts & Rcn)()dcl. Quali·
ty work . 6~2·11464 or &la-041.i
QUALITY Repa.Lrs -Altera·
fjon~ -New ron~t. by hour
or Contract. 646-3442
Cement, (QncNt• 6600
e CONCRETE 11rs. pntios
l!tc. Concrete & blk fop saw·
Ing. Rea..~. Don, G42-8Jl4
e CONCRETE work t1t l
types. Pool decks & custom.
Ca.ii 54S-.132~
•CUSTOfl l PATIOS•
concrete sa1vin: I.: rr:moval
State Lic.•84i-tOlf.
• CO.'llCRETE Work, bond·
cd & lie. Conc:retc sawinl:'.
Phillip& Cement. 54&-6380
COlENT V.'Ork. Aflything
yoo ~d. Call S.12-81~7 for
lrt't' cs!. Llt''d &: bontlrd,
PATIOS, \VALK$. DRIV£:
\VA YS. 1"rec tslinllllC.
J, RAY 'c(>NST. Gt?--1:.!H}
f.1/iSTER c11rpenl<'r .$4 !l<'r
hour. ncmod,llng·t't<'paln.
~·l:Z-6-iOO or $3!Xln
&ly Ir Beach Cleaning &ni
Carprts, 1Ylndo\\'S, floors, ell•
Rrs & Cotnc 'I. &16-1401
Paperhanging
Painting 6850
NJo:,\T. Exp. Painter, no
llrinkini:. Collrge s tudent.
Low prices! Sll'vc 5<111-1549
PAINTING Int &: Ext l.oweti!
contract('() prices. Jo"ully ins.
Slltlllfaclion gwir. r \-ce e11t.
J im \Vttks 67.3-1166
f.XT/lnt. pnl~. Avt!r rm. $.XI + s;OOd pnlnl. neat work
Joe ttf5. Roy, 8-17-13S8
PAJNTING, Puperins; 16 YN
in llurllor a1-ea. Lie k bond·
rd. R.f!fs furn. 642-2.156
Plasterin9. Repair 6880
e PATCH PL.ASTERING.
All type~. Jo'tte t'Stirnal~
c..1~
Plumbing 619<
PLUP.fBJNG R.1'..'"PAlR
No job too sm•ll e 642-TI28 •
Pool Strvic• 6910
•Isl ~fo. f'rt4'! Ellprr. Ile,
ttlioblel Tony Taylor Pool
Scrvlet'. 008-4818
IS YOUR AO IN a.ASSl~
FJEDf Som~ne will be
lookln; fflr It. 0 111.I &lu.618 •
I"'!!~,_ ___________ ~---...----------~---------------
•
Get Set for the Flaf-Wavingest
~Day of them All ••• Fly a New Flag
••
"
' "' : ... , .. ·-'
' -,, :· ...... ,
!,• ,,.
'' 'r\j .•
,. ,,.
I;•;.. I ,,.
' ' ......
i ,, ~ ',-
" ':-· .
' .
:· ' ' >
Help The
Independence Day (July
4th) and Labor Day (Sept.
1) are coming soon. Be
ready to celebrate ivith
flying colors tvith a De·
luxe New Flag Kit. Order
yours today. Supplies are
limited.
Boys~ Clubs
Fly a new flag at your home or office during this patriotic season, Here's an offer that lets you save money and help
your Boys' Club, too, Participcting in this public service offer are the Boys ' Club of the Harbor Area, Boys' Club of
Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach Boys' Club. Here's how you can help them and help yourself. Just order this
beautiful deluxe flag kit, at a fraction of its retail value, and get as a bonus a California state flag -all deliver-
ed to your door by Boys' Club representatives or mailed directly to your home in time for holiday use,
Order Now At Any of Four Boys' Club Headquarters
HARIOR ARU.
I CENTRAL IRA NCH I
594 Center Street
Costa Mesa. Calif.
Phone 549 .. 9397
HARIOR AREA
IUl'l'IR IAYI
2131 Tustin Awenue
Costa Mesa, Callf.
flhone '42·1372
HUNTINGTON IU.CH
IOYS' CLUI
llt Yorktown
Huntlntton leach, Calif.
Phoftt 53'·'415
LAGUNA IEACH
IOYS' CLUI
175 North Coast Highway
LCHJuna leach, Callf.
Phone 4'4·2535
Use m11il order coupon below an d send it directly to club he•dqu•rf•rs nea rest you. Your flag kit and bonus state flag will
be delivered or ma iled directly to your home or office. O r you ctn pick them up in person at the Boys1 Club headquarters
in your area.
Pick Up Your Own Flag Kit and Get This Ff'ee Gift
50.STAR
UNmD STATES FLAG
39s
c...,....n..., ....... ,.,.sr..,~
Moot tt1tr, lllfywd.. MW llMlftlillt '-rd:·
...... ICfCWC, •• al it. • ..,.. c:udbo9rd .... , .... ~
Holid•y Bonus: High Qualily 12
by 18·inch Californit Sitto Flag
. ·-
..----------------. I
I
I
I
.
Just clip out this m•il ord•r coupon •rid fill it out. S•nd, •lon9 with
ch•ck or mon•y ord•r, to th• Boys' Club h11dqu1rt•rs n••r•st you.
M•k• checks p•y•bl• to "Boys' Club."
Pleas• Mncl me .................. Am.r1cew f'-t klh at SJ.ts per kit.
I undentW I will recti•• os • Mllchly bonus • Cellfornfo shit• flot
wltll each kit.
I N1m1 ............................................................................. -.......................... .
I Str11t Addr1ss .................. ~ .... ~ .. ~ ...................... : ....................................... ..
I City .. _, ..... _ ............................................. _ ................. Zip ......... -................ .
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I Phon1 ................................................ Enclos1d is $ .................................................... 1
I Th i1 sp1ci1I holid1y off1r is • public 11rvic1 of th• DAILY PILOT and th • Boys ' I I Clubs of the H1rbor Ar11 , Hu"tinqton 811ch i nd l 19un1 l11ch. I
1-.------- - - - - - - -_,
!THIS 15 ACTUAL DECAL SIZll
Free Decal
Whil1 th1y l11t, lh1 loys' Clubs off1r you th is speci 1I, fr1e 9ift
• , , 1 d1c1I of th• Americ1n Fl19 Ii~• those you s•e everywhere
on car windshi1ld1, home i nd offic1 window5, or •ven on the
family bo1t. Visit th• Boy•' Club l"e1r11t you I phon1 for hour' of
op1r1tion l. Buy• fl19 k:it: git the d1c1I fr11 . Supply of d•c1l1
is limit•cf. Hurry.
. •
'""""· Junt 27, 1969 OAll.Y Pit.OT s111v1c1 D11tlCT01tY I ~OIS a IMPLOYMINT JOIS a IMPLOYMINT JOU• IMPLOYMINT Joas a IMPLOYMINT JOIS a IMPLOYMINT JOU a IMPLOYMINT MlltcHANolsl ~It MIRCHANDISi POlt
Ro ..... I, ltopolr. -Holp. Wontod. Mon 7200Holp Wllftleol, Mon 7200 Holp Wonted, Mon 7200 Holp Wonhd Ho"' Wonhd Hol Wonhd SALi AND TllADI SALE AND TRADE
; II',,.. wd --w-n 7400 w-7400 :.\f..,_ 7400 Pumlturo -umll""" 1IOOO
~~~111' ....... Call MACHINISTS MOfOI HOt'E POUNTAIN YALLIY *
SCHOOL DISTRICT * ACCOUNTING ·
CLIRK
TILi, ~ • .,,
4 MAllllCJ Machine Oper's. •. ~~ • veme, 'the TUe Man • autl'll ':.'· ;:1'-...:...:U~ ";::'::; Lathe Operator Senior
* ADMINISTlA TIYE
SECllETAllY
$5.Q. le $652.
J. c. Ptnnt7 Co.
P'uhlon lll&M
Newport Beach 1'wo yean tJ(Jlerienct In pro-
ceaa:tns accounta pay1ble to
dala prooestlrc. Excellent
trlna:e bt.neHti,
DECORATOR GETS CANClll.ATION
Of 18 LUXURY APARTMlNTS
Sponlsh l Mtditm1111H F11n1itw1
j
patch. I.aJdul 1 h o w e r
repair. 8C7-196Tlltl--ODS
TrM Servin
' "'° TREES pnmed, -A removed. a yn • x p .
P&ulton Tree S e r v I c e
633-723'
JIM'S Gardt:nlna: J: lawn
mainlf:n&nce. Res. & com-
mertlaJ. * 54&-84lJ
Upholatery 6990
C2YKOSKl'S Coat. Uphol.
t;uropean O'aftamanshlp
100% tin! Ml-1454
1831 Newport Bl., C.M.
6995
own tools and do own setups.
Must be experienced on turret lalhe, have
Dn11 Press Operators
Must be experienced on all types 6£ drills.
have own tools and do setups. Mlnimwn
three yrs. experience.
Tool Grinder
Minimum five yrs. in close tolerance grind·
ing of high-speed and carbide tools.
Hone Operator
M1nann1ent Ttalnf'.e
PART TIME EVES.
• PIRSONNll.
TECHNIC!lN
$537. lo'*· • REQUIREMENTS
Typinc 60 wpm, ahorthand
90 v.•pm, Frtnge bendill:
12 day• pakl vacallon per
yr and 12 da.Y• pl.id alck $3 so '! lffve per yr, major medi-
o ... r e cal ~=ION If"' Call MIA fM:hmeye:r, !4U6S1
Call 547.7182 Mr. BOnd Ext. 225. between 2 I: 5 pm.
BOAT CARPEN'ra!IS FOUNTAIN VALLEY
E><p'd. in hlah qua111y -· SCHOOL DISTRICT
Good Jlll.Y, sfud:y wort: and *
all be~ts. HIXSON TIN'-
NEEDS
FULL TIME
• CASHIER
for our m«MMy room
c..imoc Controls
Dlvldon of Ex·Cello Corp,
116 Whittler Avo.
Co1t1 Me1e
Rtet':nl, 11ucce:Wul ~perieoce 646-2491
prelerrcd. Competitive waa· An equal opPo.rtunlty
es and outst&.ndin& benelUJ employer Incl-prolit aborll\s. 1---===:....... __
APPLY JN PERSON
10 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
lolonday thru Yrida,y
24 Folhlon lalond
An equal opport\lr'lley
•mploytt
e NOTE TELLER e PART TIME
TILLER
UNIT!D
CALIFORNIA IANK
!.
J AIL BWD NlW -,
t:!':ra:;.~::.::::: ........ fi-i: '-!L..=~-rJ.-;''lMJI\"":~;.,,;, .• ~i;i' l\'f.···· ·~·· ... ,............................ . ,:., .=. " lll!Jt ~·!·:::::::::::.. . . s... ~ •w~ ............ ,
A decora tor dream house on display -3i :
rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture
reg. $1295.00
SACRIFICE • • • • • • $391
*t MOttft ... •notttft> -n CA&rf out1; OWM ACCT&. mm FURNITURE t
MARINE, (S.. ch .. 1.. DUPUCA "'
WELDING, Portable equip-Phillips) 829 Production Pl. MACHINE m'"t. Specialbin& rn .,..
cavalin& oqulp. St• Y • N.B. OPEllA TOR
f\1uat have minimum of tw o yrs. experience
on Sunnen Hone.
* 2:?2 Ocean Ave .• Lqurs.a Bcll.. 4~546 1844 Jlewport Blvd.Hat.H.y
Costa Mesa o,nly
""' ..... '11 t -w ... Sot •• s ... '116
M•leyk ,,....,., Sun and Aft CADILLAC CONTROLS BOYS 10 -14 $457 lo $541 4:30 week day1. CUrler Routes Open
• ASSEMILEllS • lf6Al IRAlllE
JOBS a EMPLOYMENT Dfvi1ion of Ex.C:tllo Corp. for * l..acw>a Beach. So. i_.,. T•atinZ and typing <o wpm. Good finaer dexterity
and aood .,...,.ht. All
penn. openinp. 0 n 1 y
thole with aoocl' at~nd·
ance and wilUnpt'SS lo
\VOrk need apply.
Job Wint.I_ Men 7000 ''" WWttter A-.. C.... M... o.u;_.; ~!....IlDT General and tl*eld know1edp. 646.2491 ~ Fumlture -TECHNICIAN, Draftsman, YOUNG MEN, will;.,.,. 10 REQUIREMENTS
OR• So I Ari .qu•I •11~rtunity •111,l•v•r .... ""·pi""' 60 \\"'m. shorthand K. Sotoro,ioulo1 .
1:144 Bounty Woy
Laguna BMch,
. me e x p ~ r e n c e ' ll!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!T!!!!!!!!!"'!!l!!!!!!!"'!!!"'!!!! I learn trade: ?i1erchand'~1..... • ' ·• • Ambltloulli. Mln 548-4900 •tock clerk, lea"i-....,k, 90 wpm. Frtn&e bendlts:
.-14 12 days pa.Id vacation per newport .
personnel
agency
MAN. 25 eo.t Maint. job. H•lp Wanted, M9n 7200 Help Wanted, Men 7200 purchuin&. Military corn· yr and u di.>'• paid lick MASTER
exp. Al;k for Mike 536--1.9U mltments completed. Call If.aw per yr, major medi-----===-
b!twn. 6-S PM. WE ARE LOOKING 1,,c!\46-~9313~=~----cal tnmrance policy. r.t l Sn Bett)r BnQ at
BOY " ...., '""""" loh-ENGINH"' FOR MEN WHO ARE SAI-"'MAN/Mtthanic. Full FOR 1NFORMATJON SPulA TIES CO.
Call Tim 846-2204. Anything. L1 LOOKING AHEAD time, "A'' smog lice~. Call Aflu Zachmeyer, M'l""51 m f'
You are the winner ol
1 tickets \o the
S • E t..et us train you for 1 C<tt Know brakes. No ma.JOI' Ext. 225, between 2 i: 5 pm. 1640 Monrovle Ave. ~ C..Xec FIREWORKS
Job Wanted, L•dy 7020 en1er lectronic in insurance. An opportunity work. Must be top J . W. RobiRIOR Costa Me1e Auncy for Caner Girl• SPECTACULAR.
Engineer5 to learn the busineu A: earn Wesman, .neat. See Jim, 642-2427 .. ,.. Many profeuional A: tech. at the
TECHNICAL
POSITIONS
MATURE ""'OITW\, capabli!,
nHeble, des:lttl pos. as
hakpr. tor 1 penon. Lag.
Bch or NB areL Excel. ref.
f.5 years electric d«l&n ex-2500 Newpcrt, CM. Ha1 opening for: ._ \V, O>ut HWJ .. N. B. nlcal positiona available. ANAHEIM
ri -"~ G-• 1 extra money on a put time -~=.:...,-'-:;·=---Sy appoint. M6-3939 ,._,, M ..... bman ,,.,_ pe ence '""" ...... '""· nwua e basis, befo-lea·..i-"""''" EXP putty cook Ir An equal opPOrtunity ..... · ~ '...._,u. STADIUM ele-ctronic enginttr desired. '" ... ,. J~un-.. .._ ,_, _.. ........ C 833 Dover Urive present job. Become a 1 Ll\P u.:1 '""""'· _.. * COSMm * employer RECP-PBX operator, 11 am Newport Beach on July 4th
Own tramp. Call beJ. 2 Pbt Senior L01ic
615-2919 0.1f9n E"1fneer1
SWEDUIH woman ba.ln~llst 4.:ii yea~' digital loa:k: de1i&n
A apert cokNt, 10 yn ex-experience requlred. Graclu.
per. 1n 5th Ave Salon in ate physical science or Mi.th
N.Y. eeeks pol. in N.B. major desired.'
371-1'30 RedDndo Bch.
Jronlrcr. alimllions
free pick DP and delivery * 54(M)075 *
UC. Prac. l!W'ff:I (2) A vall. --ar-lblL .,,. abllb. IJ9.6m
LADY 'W11ta IJVe in position
in Laguna .Beach. M a r y
"97-1032
Oom .. tic Help 7035
Georse Allen Byland Azeocy
Empleyer P'l.)'1 Ftt
tJX:.8 E. 16th, SA 547--0395
Chlnele Uve-tm. Chettful
Permanent Exper1enced
Far F.ut Aaency 64U'103
Holp Wonted, Mon 7200
• • EXPEDITOR
Six months operle:nce u
expedltor In el~ics
manufacturing, follow. up
and toordinate with prod-
uction control, purcha!tilng
and en&inee:ring on late
iltl'Q!I.
MASTER
SP«IALTIES CO.
Project Engineer
f..5 years digital logic and
electronic project eJQ>erience
desired. Graduate engineer ·-· VANGUARD
DATA SYSTEMS
ii a growth -oriented, per-
lpht'ral ..qu.ipment manu!act·
urer located near Orange
County Airport. Pl~ ft-
spond with resume to:
P.O. Box 1820, Irvine, C:al.
attn.
EnciJ1ttrlng Department
COOK
Dayt &. Night1
APPLY IN PERSON
MON THRU ntURS
BEI'WEEN 3-5 P.?if.
SNACK SHOP
3444 E. Coast Highway
Corona del Mar
*DRIVERS*
No Experience 1640 Monrovia Av1. N
Cotlo Mo10 eceuary!
642·2427 ?.fust have clean Callfomla
An equal opportunity driving record. Apply
employer YELLOW CAB CO.
• • PRODUCTION 196c!.1:.!'t.
SCHEDULER -A~uT=ooc.M~EC~H~A~N=1c~ 1
With at least ol'lf! year e;l(per-
ie.nce as 11cheduler in mater·
lal or production con trol.
Good trinp benefits, profit
aharln&.
MASTER
Busy shop of new car dealer
nee& light service mech-
anic. Good working cond. >
day wk. Apply #TVice mana-
ger.
110LlDA Y SALES
& SERVJCE
1969 ltarbor Blvd., CM
time aaent when qualilied time. 494--t&98 -~~~~~---1 to 5 pm for growl,.-Mfa". --,,,0,.,.!.;:-~:;:::;,__ Please call 642-S678, ext 329
with a i\W'llntecd income Benton's Coffee Shop SAWWftl.tbl J. W. Robinson Co. Pifuit be neat appearlna:, * NEW FAi..lLITY * between 9 and t pm to claim per month. 133 S. Coat Jfwy, L8 Ul'U type min 4IMiO ""'Jim. Pmn CONTINENTAL MANOR your tlcketa. (North Coanty
Farmer1 ln1. Group EXPD~ IUSIOY Hes Opening• for: position. XJnt em pl oyee LAGUNA BEA0 1 toll-free number ls 5f0..1220)
Ed L•ni .W0.1UC OVer 18. (Experience preferred benefita. Apply in peraon. Pflrmanent and Immediate OVER.STOCKED
SURF.• SIRLOIN MIWNERY o· I employmeot' ll"""'k .. pen.
Ora" •• r-··oty , ·-t 1 • 11c nstruments, Inc. 2701 ......... ..... • .,. 5930 Pac Cst. -N.B 1'Ull time potltion. Ex-DEPART South H .. 11 .. ..i .. -s s ldtchen helpers. relief cook, Pontiac Oealttlhlp • ·• • tttlent company bent· MENT _......, I., ant. janitor Cmalntl, social and MUST SELLI
Nowbasopening1Sor2)'0UDI SERV .. SI'A. ATI'NDf'IT: MANAGER An.a recreation director, PBX New 9 pc. corner ~·
a;ressive & 11 t ab I e auto. Full hme, Airport Texaco. flta. • SEC'JY/RECPI'. Xlnt ad· operator (nights). Company choice of clrs. reg. S230, now
mobile salesmen. o Ire c t See Mike, 4678 Campus Dr/ APPL\' vcmt op_pty! Hl!«vy typinr, benefits. Pat wad 10 w, Sl49.50. Hearlboo.nh: Klnp
sales experience preterred.1_N_.B_._______ PERSONNEL DEPT. •nd lite bkkpr. To $500. Call Mr. 774--$30, 49'1-9458 Sl.'i. Queens S12.50, Full Bu~ not neoeasary. We will TRAINEE, Ma1*&tt -Apply 'elhlon l1l1ncl HAIR GOODS Richards, 541)..6()55_ SALES Lighting fixture $10.50, 1\vins $.1.95, New 7'
train ri&ht men. Our top Royal m FiJb 1: COASTAL AGENCY t"OUnd brd wllec1. velvet
men earn in excess of $25,<m Qilps, E. 11th St., C.M. Newport Beach APPLY A member of sl\Owroom -experienced -headboard &: spread w/ re. •--111 •· •·-UI al&O opening lor a trainee. verse aham, cu11tom quilted. a ye:a.r. PARKING tt t hn Equal opportunity "mployer PERSONNEL DEP'l' .:xn: fll "" """" fli, Inc. Sal I co · · Apply '" pel'IOll to a ., e:qt., a . -F h' I I nd . 2190 Harbor Bl.. Costa Mesa ary P us nun1ss.1on. reg, $650, now $39'J complet.!. med. f1ve Crowns Rest. •• ion 1 • 547-6351 N bed Kl 50 General Sales M~r 3801 E. Cat H C.dM. EXKUTIVE Newport Beach DENTAL Ull.st&nt I Rcrt-C\\' ~: ng $9'J. ' Bob Lonn-pre Pontiac wy t , __ H11,_ , _, BEAUTY Openi.tor needed. Queens S89.50, f"ull $49.50, • .... Equal Opportunity EmplO)~r ary -.gUN. uia • ~sure d 1 ~ ty Salo N 19 T "" 139 50 lull ' 13600 Bet£h Blvd. W1tmnstr Help WafttM World area. All phuei mu-e uxe u-.:au n. o. w • • ':I auaran. ,
W
•y SfCRET ARY l~. S~75-~ •tart. Re-P.tonarch Bay Plua, So. Spani6h long • boy ~r. • omen 7400 EXPERIENCED Laa:. Niguel HAir f'ashion sofa, hand carved wood. EXPERIENCED 1-;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. awne, P.O. Box I0815. Santa .... ,,., boaut. uphol. -""~ I• Pennanent -part -time.·~ Ana 92Til. Replia; strictly •• ,.. ...... * COOK * • * prax. 4 hn/day. Dictaphone • ESCROW • confidential. CLERK, Exp'd in selling now S329. Klng.-ize spreads.
&: lhthnd. Somtl work at SECRETARY ~;;:_;:;;;;;:~~-=-commerclal 5taUonery I.: oll choice 01 colon1, re&· $20.95.,
J.C. !3oenney Co. home. Pre.fer 40 yn. or old· J~h~ LE~~el~ in 11upplies. TIDE OFFICE now Sll.99. SIESTA SLEEP ,
Faabiob Island t'r. Send resume~: P.O. UNITED CALIFORNIA ourton 1ilyll1t1-3S: SUPPLY 3011 Ntwport SHOP, 1m 1-larbor Blvd.,~·
Newport Beach Bo.'< hfSOO, DaUy Pilot BANK . commlukin-we train! Part J ='Bl"v:d;:··:N:;;;.B;;:. ===== f:;tl~~· &i.;.2"160 daily ~
NEEDS PAJtT ma: •• NEEDED or lull time. Call -"' S.:hool•lntlrucflon 7600 MOVING '"'m 1 ... homo m ~
151 E. Coott Hwy, SALESLADIES . 3141 E. Coott Hwy 646-<HS3 apl. m"'t "'"' He,_ 1
Newport Booch Two Office Girls Corona dot Mor BABYSl'ITER want..i, ,.... Wake!il..t .,.,,,. ... , .. • .; 67~9240 home, 5 days: week, S am-chair &: buffrt, 2 Danfah .. • -~====--1 Housowlw1 a Mothers MUJt "' :is and •ble to dri,. '''°· Balboa ho. or CM Be Prosperous! """'"' chain. ' twlo '"" ~ MECHANIC Can )'ou spare a few boUrt Equ•I op.PFfunlt)' employer area. Nr. O.C. airport pref. bed11, patio table &: um· ...
Journtyman mtchanlc, n:· ea.ch day and ·add to tbe lS6 e:tih SL 67S..15ll aft 6 pm, Refs. re-Good typing 1kUl.s can open , brell1, Jarae potted plantL :\
perience Foreign or Domes-family income &t the Hme O>sta· Meo 1 ........................... 1 qu lrt'd. many doors. lnqu.ire about 2 9 i 5 C 11t11 Ip a, N B :
tl.c. One of _thedoldest Fo1r-~-~e? S"hedul~~e-~lent ---.-SH=ARP:;:::c.:;;G=A=,'---• a·bl.ll'ft'es DINING ROO!\I \VAITRESS-our "Door Openers". IEaslb!uffL Sat.&: Sun. 10-,. e~ car Rrv1cc epartmen I wt0 YOU. mo ..... .,.s, -tu-~ ES: Day 6 eve. ihlfte; avail, NONA HOITl\1AN, 3. "''
in Orange Co. Flat rate & noont, evenlnp or c:ombina. Looklnc for a permanent [J1] Lim iteO App in ptl'IOl'l, 15070 Ed· Newport FURNITURE, win.. chair. i,: warrant)' work S9.00 per tions ol all. Worlc itt a fun poaltion with the grooviest ---' H S h I I B ·~
ho •---d 50/50~ ···•-bo · I ~-Co agerlC'N Waiu.11, unt. Bch. AH for c oo o utiMll end table!!, radiOJ, TV ca.rt. ,: ur, pay u.ax: on l'll. •tort" w....,.. the finest ol •!!!~l)e n v1-...1ge uni)', RaJ h t p or Gary. 8lJ Dover Drive Pole lamp, knick knaclm. ·l; Excellent work in.. condi----->itio"' --• top -·---..i-Mwt be experienced in hi-n..ft1:.., P-•ltio-for .... QJla.l .,IU ·~·w.... "" ........ "' "" .... GIRL Wanted c-~•-...:a1 Newport .Beach 642.3870 See Saturday at garage : lions. :P..1ust have own hand lion. fa 1 h Ion d r e 1 sc1 l Qualified Appllcanb . • .,..~..,...... 1 ......., .,_ .. 1 tools. Call Sidney 494·97Tl or sporbwear. II you Qualify, 488 E. 17th St., Suite 224 RecepUOrlbt. Pref. ttct'llt sa e ... ~ .. ncu ands Dr. N.B. ~'
545--0634-APPLY IN PERSON call for appt: THE LOOK, Costa Pilesa 642-147'0 HS arad. InteMews I •m to DRIVING LESSONS (oft 2Jrd SI. between Santa ~
Construction 644-2400 10 am, CRITTERS INC., As low as $5.75 per week iv/ Ana Ave. & Tustin) j;
Admin. A11t, $13,000 PENNEY'S GIRL-Friday t y pc, in-FASHION APPARE-L 9&9A W. 17th St., CM pay later plan. Free home ft10 VJNG Houlletul of I tereslinao .1r; varitd \\'Ork. ruu. time ....... 1"-"' HOUSEKEEPER, 7:30-4, no pickup. Security Driving goo d-quallly furniahinp, "• Ftt paid. Major 8'ach '"" FASHION ISLAND ., ~~ •-~1 1 ~ -M t be Id b J"'~ I i · R""uittl knowled,.c o I e Sales.,.,, "' 19 lo 30 exper. neu. call 9-S ""'""'. .._............,. us so 1 ~ • , co. XJnt future, benefl\$. ~·· .. p · he dry • • Come! constr s.g yrs. Also 10 AM to 5 Plot liblhnd. &ood t y pin :, • Ass 'l manager aae 23 to 45 Part: Udo Convale1eent e DRIVING U:SSOI'iS WIO. new-was r er. ~:
fee jobs. !lend resume or call ?tlooday thru ~ purcl\ulna exper. desirable. Pifwit be style conscious, re--Hoap1ta.l l44S Superklr, NB, First lt'SSOn frci!: Relrig, stove. Dix liv rm
K&.y, 546-MlO. JASON BEST \Villina; to learn & &row wl liable and prompt. 642-2410 Women &: teenagcni our set. BR scl, misc. 6T.J.-&'.>4a J:
Employment Agency. 2120 AU student positlon11 filled. company. P 1 ea Jan t sur-Retail women·, apparel ex. LIKE lo Dean'ate, aell home 1 p e c I a I t y ! a. ASTRO DANISH modem rum, In 1
So. Main, s.A. Equal opportunity employer roundiflJ'!I. App I y 215 perience ~uirtd. f u mlshlngs? Commliilon 136-5731 xlnl. cond. Walnu t hutch 55" '
Field Coordinator * RivenJde Ave, NB MARLENE only. NI or part time. Educational Vacalion 5th lonr by Glen Sl.50. Bu.Uet. 1-
d * e HOSTESS/CASHIER e So. Cout Pla:ii:a, C.Osta Men Interviews Fri I Sat 9 W 1. .....,den • , . Sr Citizens 45" long SGS. Studkl couch, I
To $13,CXXI fee paid. Lea Ing '"'"!l!!"""'""'""'~~-••• -1 --brown \\'Oven i;trlp,e w/two fl. h Co XIn I' C:OUee Shop. Lar;:e del~ SECRETARY, 10mt' book· ........u•u · Chilcoat 10 le!ll!On tuni .... Bea.c are1 · t oppty. 1 "Secretary to $450 hoteL Ex 1 ind k 1 ha ..__,, --~===~---1 "'""'!!' bolsters S95. 646-1124. Comcl OOMtr. Also fee jobs. ""•• ... ,. Top co. s•-E,.. per e.oce ttqU · eep nc c..,..vund. Good CASHIER Sehl. Trlal Le5SOll. 173 Del i Send resume or call Kay,•". . . uv.na ... Contact Jlpl Demaio ln typist, M>Jne medical Mature woman. Exper. Mar C.M. ~~2859 PERFECT King size box 1:
Apply in person
RBIBBf E. lEf
M6-5ClO JASON 8 ES T g1oeen~. or Electronic bkr. puwon knowledge prefe.t-red. Apply Don The Beachcomber PIANO LESSONS Beginning spring & ntallresll $2S. I The Rigger Employ~ent Agency, 2120 ~h:!u.Pe~ne-\'°~:: NEWPC)RTER INN In person 3901 E. Cout Hwy, CdM studenl4 pref. u.c.1. Mu11lc \Vroughl iron twin head·
So. MaJn S.A. cy, 200 Westcllfl Drive, N.B. 1107 Jambortt Rd., N.8. Laguna Beach N11!3ln& Home HOUSEKEEPER & child Major. Call Bruce. 546-1478. board $10. 64z.8119 j SPECIALTIES CO.
# 16 FASHION ISLAND 6e-2'170 (Also fee jobt) e WOMEN & GIRLS 494-80?a care, llve--ln, s~~ days, prlv HOUSEFUL ol Birch turn 1,.
1'40 Monrovia Ave. NE\VPORT BEAOi e FIBERGLAS e Pleuant telephone w or 11: MEDICAL TRANSCRIBER room l bath.~. week with Job Prep1 t• 7800 .Leal.her desk. stereos, !rig: j
Coata Men NEEDS A e REPAIRMAN e MARRIED? TOO MANY Jrom our office, no exp. Ill an up.anding medical periodic ra!Hi. 5t6-e212 ra ion piano, beds, w/iron set. •
'42-2427 FULL TIME Experienced, mature, B l LLS T Permanent-part nee. Full or part time. $2 to ttc0rd11 department. Ex· DREAM Job. Ktt rim-SCRAM LETS >t&-"'8 '!
An equal opportunity DISHWASHER permanent, iood pay, Ume heJp wanted In snack $5 per hr. Apply 6-12 or 2-& cdle?t !IB.iary & benefits. portant job up >:::e & • MATCHING Jove s eat 1 ,
employer benefill. SCHOCK BOATS bar. Stt mana&"er alter l :30 p.m. 2"..0 \V, \Varner. Suile lnqmre P""80nnel Dept. mother i:: eam a wkly never used, quilted Doral,
YOUNG MEN. must be 21 &: JANITOR, part time, eve11 & 67J.2mQ * Newport pm. Paulo Drive In 217, S.A. HO AG 1\1 EM 0 R 1 AL ..... ,,." .... k u .. ~ ~· .,.7 ANSWERS &otchguarded. $75; O 11
Sat · H o;-1 Be h ·~!'!!'~!!'!!~~~~!!Pl Theater, 3031 NtW]lOrt Blvd, HOSPITAL NB ~--~ ~ ••tell groonled. in un ... .., on ac · Part or ful). Ume 10 womt'n • · ""=-~'-· ,o.;.;,;c;;,;c..;c.;.:.;;;.; paintings, 537-8032
OLIVER'S ROAST BEEF Janitor Service, 3644 Bever-SERVICE STATION C..\l. needed immed. for child WANTED, clffk for ac-~=r:: ~n.ppcra ll'\lisl -W11.ver -Cabin -EL ==-=E~G7ANT'=~w"a"'l-ou"'t-d~; ,-. 1'·
2114 W. Oceanfront, N.B. ly Bldv., L. A. 9Cro4 213: employee with experience SHOE SALES manager ca.tt, aides or companions. countinr oUice; operate ac-Brownl:rc Mt?~· Primed -\VAR PAINT table, bullet bftse & top
NEEDED: One Mechanic. 387-7317 wanted for full Ume da) ~-America'• laq;nt Aa:e 71-65 countln& machine, I I I ht 1919 Placentia CM 543.nn Jealoully Is the most radl· S900. Cos! $21.95 2 yn qu.
Salary a: comm. Exp·d. lifECH.ANIC Wanted, Class A shUt. Apply: 604 s. Cout Dm.ilf'l'I of women's isboes. S itting Pretty Aeency bookkeeping, l~ typing. ' · · cal, primeval and naked form 644-1677 j
OWn tools. 1900 Newport l.Jcell!led ~f. Apply in Hwy. Lq. Bch, Olt'vrtJa J!,EEDS Shoe Stare, So. Member of We SU Better. Hours 9 to 5, s daya. LITE Cle&n(n& Bay front of admiration. It 's admiration I o-=="'°-cc.--=-,,--, t
Bl d Costa hf person Meu Tow Service 1: Sta. ' Cout Plaza. Contact hit. Inc. SUbsldlary oi Gerber ~7040 Trailer. $1.$). I hrs wk.I -";;W~AiR;:iPciA-ilNT~i;· "'"=c=--ANTIQU E while dlnette 1et. !
rot.L v l.~ me Oel=~-n Garage; 648 Bak~r. CM SERV. SfA. SAL&9fAN' J'beIP3 Prod. Co. 142-3274 EXPERIENCED help 1 n Own trani. 546-733l h\iRCHANDISE FOR ~~fee na';;.lc, 1:;r !~~:
man. See Terry 495 E. 17th SECURITY GUARDS Full time, swing shift. Mu\ WOMAN Wanted for recep-TACO Tio, nlshts. ov. 2L ovtrloclc, blind stitch, & PBX answ'r str., exp'd Jnf. ~uS~AILluEr0AReNDturnedTRAD1::Em 642-108.'i {' C ?it U 8-931.f Newport area. Call between be ne1t In appearance and Uon11t Ii. switchboard, lite Some exp (ftf'd. Appl,Y AM, •Ingle needle. 5 dl.)'i/wk.. Varied 1h!Us, sll!«dy work.
St., . 9 am -2 pm 637--3070 handwriting. Apply 2 5 9 0 tyy,ing, Some sales, plea.sant 597 W. 19th St. C.M. day shift. hrly. pay. 1621 HB att&. 53&-8881 ANTIQUE •1 dr chest, Antl-
Bf'C.EAKTAST Oiok • ~-AUTO Sa Ir' m a"· ..... _ Newport mvd:, C.M. I with pUblic. Permanent. Ap. EXPER. Part ., __ --•-11, Alabama, Huntlncton Beach. EXPERIENCED Single Nee-qi.te sewing mach. Naua:. chr Apply F1ylng Butler. Zlm· """' ........................ &I sily 215 Riverside Ave. NB. w1"" ....... ., dl newly upholsl. 9x12 hooked mer fi73.-097T per. only. Call for appt. ~es, Dinner Houge 1-1.8. REAL Estate Salesmen why e Openton. Apply: 825 Model Hornet on sale a~ nli· Formica tbl et c . ~10 • TRAINEES • PENSIONER to live in to Call 43()...43.ll U AM lo 5 PM not •ll 8' be trained ln the W. 11th St.. Costa Mt'1a. Ieu than wbolesalet Group ~ t
DON'T give. It away, a:ttc ="°AB=1N"ET=--,M~h-K~. =E-R~"°'&. Fl BERG LASS J •take care of .semi invalid & HAIRDRESSER. Needed hottest a.tta -Huntln&ton Dt!ntal Recept. &: Bkkpr. tncludes beautlfu.I 9 6 •, f
uulck cash tor it with a MOLDER. Boat Mfg. Plant REPAIR Ute housework. Call after 6 a.1 ..... Island salon Beach. Call Phil McNamee Elq).' or colleae, 23-45. quilted 10fa A Jove seat. T\VtN hed&, redwood, lllUlliy, i pm, 6'fl.S611 """' · 962-4471 VUlqt Rul E late 546-3000 3 S ..... t .i. aalc _.__ 1 S~ pair; cheat of drawers
t ... 1 8601 Ediaon, Hunt. Bcb. SCHOCK BOATS 11...:.;;::,..:"'-..::::;:...._. ___ 1 ~232 or 6'l5-3'i01 s _.._.. ....,.,,,,. or $10· mlJTOr m1plc frame
Dail)' Pilot wan JW. S36-856l day or night. 673-2000 ~ Oishwasht'r, part time. SE BOOKKEEPER. pt. time. MUSIC • lST GR.ADE I: tliblu, swaa or table lamps. ' •
&U-5fi71 Salll"t ln1tr:uctor Ce.II afttr 2 PM. the LICEN D Shampoo girl, Must be famUi&rwlth bllli'll' DANCING teacher needftl. Will pl.a.cque, kiJ¥, qllt!Cn. "1_1_0.~61~>-21=-"~~~~-
wm:sr ~In
.,_ Tho DAILY PnDT ........ Saw
0C FIBERGLASS Villa Roma Restaurant, A!llt. l'ftdtd for busy Won, procedurn on pei brd 1)'1-Call 6t&-14'4 or full me bed.room suite 8' BEIGE quilted M>t.a. 2 r.
SH K BOATS FABRICATOR ffS N. NeWpOrt Blvd. NJS. Wed. thru Sa.L 67J..3820 tt'm . 2 yn. exp req'd. ' 1..::::..==.:....____ complete Ind bar apr!.naa:, ma tching bloo chrs, 1: t
67).215Q * Ml M929 • * WAfTRESS eXJ'd ov n. 494-0760 BAR. WAITRESS mattrcu. llneN: A boudoir \vhlle chr. $100 for all or tell ~ al Gell-coallnr 1.atat ' • • SCO'JTIES, 436 E. 17th st. ,__ ~.. r.• ... ~·-SIGN PAINTEJ\ &: LAYOUT partK .It familiar w I baJJd eee PBX eee FL Yl NG Bt.rrLER. 67J.<1971 , Sp E C I A L M A C H I N E Coll ta Mesa ..... .,pa, Spanish oak 6 pc =P· ~
MAN. Exper._OIQ. SJ.GO hr lay-up, Pmnanent -Stladfd Ans•·alns:Strvk.-e.,t.sopen-Contact Mr. Zimmer operator I"======== dinU.: tel priced t>IMWhett ~Qu&~ll~ty~kl-.,.~ ... ~.-.. ~u~,-.. ~.-I
to start. 21N8 Randolph St.. • tn chalye ol producndn. Ines on S.lPM A J~:\1 GENERAL HOUffkttpU. soorts"-ear. Top p&)I. Jebe Men Wem 7500, at approx. SU9l.OO AU. Compklte, unused $98; worth C.M. m.,1234 lhUf.I, n to 45 )'T'I. &adl 5 dqs. Swedish, ~ at Kl-26616 • • FOR ONLY $399. $3> down, $250. After 5 or wkndJ
DEUVERY Boy, Put lime St rd/H nd atta. Ph : 54..'4222 German. '9M170 ASSISTANT BOOKKEEPER SLEEP ft'f cut\. Su bjfeta $4.99 per "'Hk ' out ot =8'~7~""°'==-~..,...--~-I ,.
lot Corvan crude, Mon.·f'rl Ma::.wi a:n J: .. •M Cbarp Nune prr steno to nan private of· AIR, A/P, Sa1tl')' Com· needed for UCJ 1lctp lab. =~t::l~K. A.le~~ OOU8LE bed. map I e
U.S PM. 6*-1961 lion. APP4r at Don 1)e •HOUSEKEEPER, "P prtl. flee u O&l Fridu for stock meMllnlle w/ abtllty, Ap-1tudl•1 for th\J iwnmtr. r.erttury F'Urnlt~. 971 ~ bookcue headboerd $33; nm SUN NEVER SETS on BMcbcomba' 3901 £ CoUt App. tn PlhOft: lAIWll lnwstor. 5t&-733l ply at 200 Brlus C.?if. Call ~ e.xt lSS. Garden Crow 8 1 v d., rprtnp A mattrea. doubJe,
Q 1ain.t'1 action power. Hwy, CdM. ' • 8eacb Nuntiw ffomL WANTED baby1ltlf:r W IO BEAtmCIAN full ttme · no FIC Booitkeeper, pt -t rn • Garden Crm--e Oall,)r IQ..9. like new US. 675--219')
Fot an ad to ICU around YOUNG man. mecbanlc:al 49M0'1I )T old boy. Del C1no CM ellenttle ~Ired; ~ 11 " Pt.rm. Exper. Pay/ft. Tav Sat JM. &an J.U Come KJTCH.EN dinette •I, wood
tht clock, dlal ~ ipt. helpful but not nee. U IXP'D WAITRESS ..,,.,. )'OUr home. M-D enduatn Mlcome. Cell R. PIL, BUt i: ~.I ,,;'";:.°':;;call;;,;<7:;.14::1.::!>30-6240:0:..:::;~ tone Jormlca tap with 4
DON'T rusr W".sH for ane. dQI a wttk. The F.atl'a SUJtr A SJJU.OlN JfOtJSEJCEEPP.Jt for two Manapr: 541-9919 Mi.9890 NS TRANSFER • mu.~t seu. BR chain, $35. 646-IO&I I
lblnC ta tum.lib your borne P 1 um b Ing , Inc. WI Sl30 Pac. Cat. lhr>'., N.8. tlderiJ ladlu. IJY9 in, Ut. SEC!RtepL AttractJve pl APT. MJr. kml-ltilnd aoo-Hf, retri(, ht de . a.bed, 81..UE lm:ade krve IH.t.blde '
••• find cr-t bu)'s in eo. Newport BlVd., CM • MAIDS • Hotet/lfotal ""'1t. OR. S-32M tor consultins fllflnttt'• or. pie prtfmtd. P.O. Box 2158, tables, couth. almosl new a bed $75. Ne.ds clc!t.nlns.
dQ'I Qaulflrtd Ads, 2 JtlU. lime txp'd terYice ~. SUS hour. 1t1AID: Part Ume. Call In Oct, 1n17 comlder ptoHfnt, O>lt& MeN., c.J. m Oak dln ini table II. chn. G'TH24f
DAILY Pn..or OBff;.A.. atatUon help • one , can fT3..t410 ptn0n, Huntlrwtan Shores ntaf"•lrport. ~ EXPERIENCED I ,,:-::;;;;;;;:..,..,.,....,...,....,..~ 11' CUSTOP.t 1ecdOna1 ..... tJN'E.~ You .can IJ.."9 th«rn .rraveyml mah. No phone NJTE . S.nna.ld, apply in Motil 21002 Octan. H.B.. MOTEL ?ifAI[).. Part lime. \Vs ltrt11es. Wt't 21/Kttchen 2 SE'l'S trlptt btmk beds. chow tables. all Jllle ..,'+•"
fm ju&t ~la a dl,p, Dial t.U.. RICltFlELD at..19Ui A """°" to The Tk. um.. NtY.'PQrt Btt.cb help, ovrr 18. IJ)..l«JO Good cand. Xlnt ltlr beach Rc:lllOl'lll..bltl 146--191!111
'°"671 N_._ .. ,_po_rt_BJ_w_.'-' Oot"-_ .. _M.;. ... ;.;;;."..;!;2;;;..;;S.;.t...;O;;;•..;ln.:..;:S::.•·.::CM:::... __ I DAILY Prt..ar WANT AOSI f7S..114l D.;.A;..IL;;;'°';.;.PILOl';.;..;.;....w_ANT;.....;_.,,_s.;.1 .;_._ .. _._&<_2-311_112'------Whil e t:lephant.t
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f
I
-
'. •
Ull.Y PILOT' Fr1dif1 JUM 27, 2cj69i RiW16Hn,~MJ~mlij6jimr<i.:-..:r; .. ;;;.:;;:KcHANDrSI 'POii' SM.I 'AlilO TUDI' Mdcl<ANDllE .FOlt
IALI AND TL\DI sALE AND nADE SALE AND TRADE MEllCHANDISI FOii . SALi ~ T·~· ,
,...._ .... ,uml"'"' .... ~111.-1100 T-w... nos MJKoll•-· MOO
• •
flNAL WEEKEND!!
· T ..... Down .. lklltl to
Mair• 100111 For Our New Store
I SPANISH ** MEDmRRANEAN
. 3 Rooms Furniture -
. OYER $1000 YAlllf I
for $389
1 Pc Spanish Din Rm set, 8 n. sofa & love
seat, 3 heavy Medi!. style matching tables,
5'1pc Spanish bed.room set.
OTHER EXAMPLE PRICES:
* SALE * · lo-ZENITH~_...,.. W!a'""" ""·' •~ N..-WaJhr:s . Drfttt. Oj&b.; 1be tottn. rt.mote contd. ~\IU ..,.. ... M'N Med. BR.
wubers -Rthipn.ton. Walnut p-a1.11. Pay cub. PC9 • ~. lA~ B •au t •
CERTl,110 or taktowr pa.ymintl or .. ~aturat Laoldna: H • 1 r ·
APPLIANCE SlO/ mo. See at Hert-= or alt s pm.
3.13 Eut 17th SI ,. denon'a. 1ITT Harbor Bl'fd.,,1--~·------
.. . ' ..... , , .. CARPET
' ~ "Vl~:YL Costa Mna '42--0240 CM.. 54&-0155 2. HEARING aitil S25 I $115.
· mQUE hi Debt J\lq\c Chd auto pg i * ELECTRIC raDa:e. Coft. AN w te, Packard stove $1.Z> like new. 540-3810 TILE
now.ur ~ 1 t y I e lSell CoiQl' TV ... beaut large, 1,,:.::.:;:..::::.:==c..:;;..:.= ~autlrul ~wte model'. cabinet. xlnt c®d. $300. CHIU>S Bourlclng horie $7. ~ew, ODBt '490 pay cuh 67l-868'l \ • Oltome lnva.Bd nlker.$ZI ..
$200, or ~·over paymenta 21'' RCA Color 'IV, v.wka•t-64"311 __ 9 _____ _
of · $10/mo., Oieck Hen-iood.$15o. ' HOLIDAY ' Health S pa
derson's 'tint. S(S...015s *~* membership for sale,
* REFRIGERATOR •. Hot.. . . 638-M14 aft S.
point 10~ cu, fl 'wblte. Hf.fl & Stereo 1210 19 CUBJC toot chest-type
-.
• •. FREli' esljrnat~s -on ·expertly lilstalled
· floor coverings.
.. LATEST styles -in beautifw colori and
patterns. e PRICES to !uit your need&.
Licensed Contfactors
.Fully"""· Pay"""'"'·°' .,. or s1<tt0· FM & AM ire.,,,. $.50, """" ""'"'t. BLANKINSHIP FLOORS take , over paymen.ta of radio I. ~ plJtyer'. Serving cart $3.50. 546-2455
,
$9.33/11,M'· Set: at Hen-Be3u. cab. s3as val.· make CHARTER full I am 11 Y :.:~==n=6=20;• ='D=•=Y='=)=='.""'==64=2·=140l==(E=•:;;•;:;•;:;·)= ~~:-1811 """°'· C.M. olf<r . .......,. , mom""'"1> N•wport Bw:h $ WE BUY $ l! Sland>rd Poodl• """';eo. ;~:;;,..:::,-;_,---~~-I SOLID state Arvin stereo tennll club, $700. ~ Mlscell1neous 8600 Mi~ll1neou1 ~ Frisky Ii a f f e c t I on a t e
e 5 pc. Spanish oak game sei., low as $169.95
• guar. mattresses or box springs, $19.95
• 5 J>C· Spanish dinette set $69.95. • 3 pc.
Sparush bedroom ~ $99.95 • Spanish table
• !limps $12.115,
TOO big Jor • me! Cbldspot .._ GIRL.S B"-26 .. .,,, c:-.A-• i · FURNITURE s· , 847-815) · . 61 Froettree rtn 12 cu.F t~. ..,.uery &. A.C uu:: .,.,., . .,.., .... ,. ~VER'S "Special Allen MAPLE dln table xtra APP LIANCES
4 mo: old'. ~ ..it S:JO i_ ojierated. SlOO., s.?A> W. machine COh!IOle $.m. Older loOm; 36", flroJd.ing. Swift, leaves & pad. 2 ckcol'DIOI' KI'M'EN, temat~: 3·tncfs old.
_.,_,._ """ ...,_ WllM>n, Of. No. 3 typewrtter $10. lS13 C>ranc. ,.:. • ....:. wo·' •• ,, --lng c1...-1-,.,,. _ ........ N•w ••• C PTV'•-'11no'1-Sl1,.0'1· Si~ mother, ftl[bu~
flemalnde• of Huge stock at terrific savings!
No clown ..:... .. rms to meet your budget -
II.Mk fine; Master Ch•rte1 Bank of America.
wa.1 .... U'IU'"Vt.., CM &U-5696 . """';'~ ......JrJQ.. .._r , ...... ~. "'""' ,..,....,.. "' -.v I i•c:• or Ho1110 Full 54S4l6m 6/30
KENMORE W&td\u A: gu TAPE rtCOtder Sony 500, . · ·boaid, ~1r11 dent, misc. apho~. 968-5008 CASH JN )O MINUTES
dry bronze Approx 5 yn 1peaken &; microphones in-SECT'L 90fa, pair livnn yam. $150. ~. NEWPORT Beach TeM ls • 54 1-453 I • \lERY aUectiona.te, Oulty,
Old.er,Good ~ S 12 S, duded. Call 847-U62 aft 5. chain, coflee tbte, Span!Jih DAVENPORT~ chr, good as Cub Family Member¢ip. gray klt~n needl·a ~.
• w Store Chirp. 673-3291 • -·-rog, plta.r. 673-1525 .M~ $125. U»µIOle Zenith $780. !$300 beklw cOsn. You WANTED: T:win stroller in 64i--0509 6/2:B
C R..O SL E y Shelvador c.,.,.. & Equip. UOO TENTbox ... ~UerHo, ~ 4
00
. bltn~ but/wht TV w/rcmote con-pay trans. fee 833-1469 good 'cobdition: Call 837-sffil l. PLAYFUL on.np tabbj
rkl $ 15 NOY\e -.. ,.... , 6"""' troi. misc._ 6'J3..{i3Z} Quality king !Jed, quilted, any~ kitten will d e 11 • er:
refri&era!or, 'WO • • • Pl'I>-eond $$. Must llcll. 548-7448 ON 2 "·mpl<I<, uo"•"' 198·, .... ~h W AN 1! E D. OLD TOY Ms-3520 6130 Hool/ft' UJ111abt v a c 11 u m jector $125. ltontyweU super· f~=:.=;,,,;;:;c,;:=.:.::...:.:.:: D~ D -~.l els, p e r f , ...., .., ..... ,
• Thi~ Sjtle For Stock on Hind Only •
cleaner $15. ~ 8 movie camera. $100. BA'ITERIES 6 V $4.95 ex, 12 Oa leas, ~·Solitaire ,$250. After S or wknds, TRAIN.s . MA!>E BEFORE 3 BEAtrrlFUL klttehl, I
PIONEER IUll •• W _ 847-3189 · l/ $5.95 ex, ruar"· 18 .rno. Pay ing set, apprs $50CXI, 847-0406 ' 1945. Phone. 642-0382 wks. Old-SiamesefPenlai\
cond1tlo Used 8 .SOid ,._, ....., ~'~ 823 SQ. fl.,• Beige nylon ' · , ...,~,.,...,, . r<M Y au.... a..,. U.25-old batt 54().,"""" ,. S2000 --·~"""' ~.,,.,.... c~..__.....,,. 6~
home done~t need. c:_· $625, seortlng 'Goods . 1500 RUMMAGE SALE BOY'S Sting-bike $40. 5-carpel. Xnlt cond.. S2/sq, Machinery. etc. 8700 °y=REE=,.~'"'s,.'-pu~ .. -p.,.iK-, -.. .,. .. =1ru;i,
aell ·'300. fi73...70S4 • ATTENTIO June 26, 11, 28 9:30-5:30 s~. e1(cellept condition. yn.I ., approx S rms. Al90 4 . STEAM BOILER , Poodle It Sch Dau ~e·r
I CU FL W•-~ v....i""'t . N ' ' 867 W. 19th St'. 'C.M. 646;1044 1• rms Draperies. 644-1027 · . . ·M&-8910 . . 612J t · iai" !"'6" HUNTERS 8• CUSTO · lndWltriaJ Steam·~r. Par-. . · freez.er, works perfect, f15, M s u r Ibo a rd DIAMOND ·piefi!.ed earring.s, 8'x10' PORTABLE g la 1 1 ker lo' h.p. Good Working 6 MIXF;D Puppies, femaleat
I022 * 546--4899 New iUll shop in Costa Mesa, perfect cOnditlon· 1 year old J,i cts each. Apprs $1250, hot\Se. $49 )VU haul. (i42....5200 __._. wo~"•"• P...._,,_ · f)'tt ·to aood b;o Pl e s ~ IOOO Gor1go Si le Newport Bea~ area. n>e S50. S47...J:W'I ' _,,. eu.n ,,_ -~· 54• ,583 t.vnu ,-•. ..,. .~......... ·~ 61,21 NORGE Auto wuhl!!f, late finest In fUhS Ii all acceSllOZ'-· .,.,.... · &&iorwce _,.,_ 'll'•.....u..u eves: .,..... of 100 ~. $850 54&-5623 968-....,.,., · · :.J
.KAmtlNG Dreseer draw.. iiiiiiiiiijijiijii;iii;iiiiiiiiiJ model, xlnt cond. $'15. ies. • TORO ~to Ray mowei:, COMPLETE scJ>a · diving Auto Air condilloner after 6 ptn. KITfENS; 2 lltt~rB to c~
ers,&.headbo&rd·old.Also SATURDAY &t7-8115 The"EARLOFARMS:' W/bag, exclent shc\pe. $«1. gearwithacce'°'ies.$180. Sean, $50.' HAMMERMILL Gxl fl:om.· 3107 Co;altdce·\
1 twin bed. 646-5749 GllUG£ S"'r: Coldspot Refrla', Suite 10 2C62 Newport Blvd. 91f2-6lt9 .548--2100 alt Sor"6@.8579 e can 540-9889 gr u e nd l't' r : $250. lx4 CM ' 6/.2'f
' EDROOM set iDcludea box AKA AU good cond. fro, CP.1646-7318 Hours 2° tll 9 pm ~ 8 PC Maple dining aet, 3 2 YRm embenhi' to Ho1iday 2 "SCHWINN ~:If!" &iris jc1.wcrusher, $2:i(I. Can be 3 PSYOIEDE;LIC kittens.
.-prinp & mattress. Very 10 AM to 5 PM· •£162.-6538* 1i1AN'S gou bat ladies golf ,.uP power mover, 2 love ·Heit.Ith Spa, make ·otter. bicycles, practicall~ ~~·· ~n at S1ito.tton fiP.e &'Steel: 56-4592
fine1t quality $250. 54Mi075 22l2 REOLA NORGE Gas Drytt, 15 lb bag \.\ith matchin& head seata:. '8-Jl95 *' 6Ta-i-11m SU each. s.t6-&Ml 813 Y/. 171h St., C.M: . J;=.,;,==;.T.""r 'i l
AHOGANY .....,....,, NDS DR. cop. 2\1 yn, ""°" ""'"""' coven. GoU ""'-Good TRANSPORTATION' T . NSPOR TION TRANSPORTATION ·. _T._.:.:RA=N:!:$:..PO;:.:..PT.:.:A::T;;l::ON:::..._;..:.:.::::;::.::~.:.;.;=='-'-'I •-1 • bl < NEWPORT BEACH nd .~......., ... _.__offer cond. See at garage sale • -111"P ea., ta e • (ott 23rd St., between co . ....,..,,~ . ._..,. • SATURDAY. 2'282· Redland! . '9800 -C.rs "h upholste~ cbafn. 546-82M Sa ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiii;iiiii;ii;;iiii;iiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii;i;iiiiii;;iiiji;i;;;;;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;,iii;ii;;iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii~;ii;ii nta Ana Ave .. &: Tustin} Antiques 1110 Dr. Newport Beach Cott
HIDE A BED 23rd SL "'""'"Santa Ana
Good cond. "5 . ...,,.,. • TO SETl'LE A•N MUST MAKE ROOM •·1'utlol ' .
E au mlrror cocktall ESTATE! Giant gar a I e FOR NEW SHIPMENT SURFBOARD. 4 months Cld,
38 IK_..._ ,...., ,._.,., aaJe. 8' divan, tble1, linens, FVRNITtJRE -·~•••"CE d • ••1.;11c1 • ......_ _.._.ft1 ,__ ~~ no l.np, 7'lD", super fast •
... ,.,.._, <U1.1nps, washer, lug-SALE wave set fin. $70 or best of.
Furnltvre ·ao10 gage. boob. bar stools, , ARIEL fer. c.an Rob~
crptg, patio chain. dishes, QUES
UTER Dlvlilon dlspos-misc Items. Very rea.i;! ANTI SURFBOARD 8' 9", Oiuck
'l!<iol modern McDowt ll &: Thurs alter 6 p.m. thru Sat 369 E, 171h St .. Ci\I Deni, ideal for beginnen.
"'-1..-steel dcalu, chain 6 p.m.. 12'17 Marian Lane THOMAS E d i s o n gramf.· $00.
--• ' pho~ •~ p I a y', p--645-2315 &s, tables. etc. N.B. S4S-5976 ..... "'" .....
McMAHAN'S 7n-1450 * * * * * d\lced, pat. late 1800's. ~rf. CAMPING equip: Propane
lS30 S. ·Ana.helm Blvd., in 237 16th .Place cond. with hom. Plays ... well stove, cooking kit, lantern,
Anaheim (alongside SA Saturday. & SATURDAY & w/ S playin&' cylinders. etc. 2S3 Del Mar Ave., O.f.
Fm!wl)' at Kattlla} SUNDAY Make oUer. CaU Chris . .
Car tape, tapes, ski boat, 645-2069 art S. Mlscell•nMUI 1600
co Equl-nt IOll
r lCl'APHONE tl'll115Criber
um!!d one mo. 'New $465 113.Cl'.
... $200. Elect. . oddlna
madL SZ eves: M6-9Sl6 ..,..,..,._
fishing equipment, book!, ANTIQUE English brass um· WHAT KNOT SHOPPE
household itelllli, and much breUa stand $25. Antique
mote. ars cabinet & radio $3:1. NOW OPEN DAil..Y 10-4 642-8ll9 HANDCRAITED GI.ITS
I012
* * •• *
GARAGE SALE &: Mfg'1
agent CLOSE-Otrr. Sat.sun
515 Signal Rd. NB. 642-3397.
Baby bed & matl $12, over-
under studio couch Ir ~r
MARKET equJp: deli case, SSO. water ski.is S5 ea ad-
Y@J-e-ttnten. many more just.able metal rakes P.so.,
mile items reduced to % Friction p roof In ~ olJ
Jlriee. Call 494-ICCG 60c/can, and much more!
I=========" I MAITRESSES, °""'" ...... Household Goods I020 dinette set, chairs, books,
SMAIL appliances, pictures,
frames, boob, toys, ladles
• men's clolhing. See Satur-
d iey at aaragc sale. 2282
Redlands Dr. N.B. (oft 23rd
St. between Santa Ana &
Tustin Ave.)
AMPEX um series recorder,
misc. tapes included. $90.
6<2.Q089
~rage Sale 1022
box springs. I a m p s ,
vacuUm, 8 lug truck whls,
bicycle, picture11, ltames.
plaqu es , antiq u es
surfboard, etc. 281) Cabrillo,
CM. 646-7677 Fri-Sat.
PATIO SALE. 1120 N.
P lacentia No. 4, Fullerton.
F ri-Sat 6/27/28 9-4. Clolhing
adults & childrens, bric-a·
brae, disbcs. triple mirTOr,
shoes, mile. HOME BAKED
GOODS
e ARTS A: OtAITS e
KING Louil XN, 9 pc din Items taken on consJanment.
room &el. XJnt cond. 50 Bring in your handiwork.
Years old. Prv Pt t Y · 2622 Newport mvd., New·
7l4-332-G261 port Beach, near Woody's
Whorl.
Sewf'1tl M1eh1-. 1120 * AUCTION *
1969 SINGER with .zlg...z.og &: U YQu,wilJ a,eJ.l or buy,
walnut console. Makes ~t-aive \Vindy· a tr.' ·
ton ~les, deslp etc .. $5.25 AuctiOlll!I Friday 7:30 p.m..
""'· °' $36.oo cub. ,.,....,. W' d ' A • SINGER . Sewing . machine in Y s uct1on B•rn
rental.I. $5 mO .. J'liee ·pickup Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat1.
& delivery. can.~6 2075~ Newpoprt, CM 646-86116
1125 MAN'S summer suit siR Mvslc1I lntt. 42 R, Blue denim sport coat
VOX guitar with e a s e , size 44-R, &II wool sport
Sllvertonc amp. Like new coat size 42-R. See Saturday
$100 each or. $115 both~ Will at garage sale. 2 2 8 2
consider otler. Call Rob ft.ed4inds Dr. N.B. (oH l3rd
842-5910 St. between Tustin Ave .t
MAJ~IC Drum set, gold Santa Ana Ave.)
gd. cond. $UO CHEVRON · WOO WI k i
642.J397 DoUan Contest • ~ parts
Giant Gergae Se le H 0 USE Sold-everythirig ;========== 3 A: 4 on $2,500 Ucket • P.llrt
ABDick Duplicator S40, Pola· must go. Furniture, oriental Pi1nos & ~ 1130 7· on $1,(0) tlcla!t. WW split
roid camera S2S, Verifax olf-rugs, kitchen u ten 1i111, prize money, Write P .O. ;.,, ... ~ •. "'°"''" '" .,0 """'" ......., u.16 • JUNE SALE!!!· eox 28', suruide, earn.
ea. Dictation l\fachines 12) Fri.-swt. 114 Ap o I en a, Factory authori9td ·dearance,,-"'~"=------
$50 ea, typewriter, art d~sk, Balboa Island. of overage returns a: demoe; ·~wage Flea l\Jarket"
..... $1~ ... 2 h~o-a-bod .,,. GARAGE SALE Piaooo ~ '0iy..,, Pn-'""!,' Jufy 29 -July. u · w/ matchilll' chairs, re-planol nf'v walnut spinet 4. AnUque &: Specialty Shops
cliner chair, headboard, Used appliances, dbl box-pianos' new It uaed Grandi &rgaina galore-fun lor all
dresser & match. nitesland, matt, fabrics, bMding, AU It de:no Baldwin Orpns SOUTH LAGUNA Vll.LAGE
Gas stoves & refrigerator. New, much more. Fri, Sat. really &: tluiy. on money 2nd Ave. ·to 4th Ave.
Sat.Sun at 2520 U1tiversity 9624218 saving SALE!! Get in on On the Coast Highway
Dr, NB, (walk thru gate ofl 'N"E\°"•""'kln&c-:-~7·,,.-cl.,.oc-..,b.,.laok~,-,~& the big deals at: MOVING: Re!rig. $10. Stove
Tustin Ave, just N. of Uni-many misc items. 12 noon to WARD'S BALDWIN S"l'UDJO $15. Camp Equip. Hair
versity Dr. l 6 pm. SAT only. 10166 1819 Newport, C.M. 6U-8484 Dryer ·$6. Port. Typewriter
Patio & Garage Sa.IC' Holburn Dr (Huntington FREE $20. Tables $2-$.5. Floor
Sat. & Sun. June 28, 29 Bay) HB. lamp $3. ?tlisc. 621 Acacia,
9:CXH :OO .?>...,. w 1 1 monlb rental of new J!iano. CdM 6To>-4968 v 1 ... 1. a. Bedrm set. ·~~:,,:.c.:_,==-----309 Poppy Ave., Cd1'1 Book II Choose from Ka\v11,i, ltallet1· COME EARLY! case w eaded glass & Davls, Stark, Hammond, ·e 'Tis Tropical Fish •
J\l5t moved to l!maller holl9e doors. Hi-poster dble mp! Cable, etc. 6 months mini· OPENS Thurs, J~ 26. bed. 54S-74n. 4Z3 Snug mum. SALE on tanks. fish, ac-
& ha\>e Iota lcf. OVC!r! Lge Harbor Rd. NB ll'~'MOND ceuories. 9CllO Edinger, FV.
C"Ualom glau top collee =~=~~----'"-842-4530
table, round dining table GARAGE Sale, tools, garden 1n CORONA DEL MAR l~,-'·o=O:;...=~----
w/4 chairs. bdr. rhaise & supplies, train set, chairs, ~ E. Cout Hwy 673-8930 LADIES White i')ld dia·
diair, round pool table, plus lots of good stuU. Sat & Sun 1969 WURLITZE R mond & sapphire ring.
many other tiems. DON'T l -5 prn, SUn morning. 2312 0 C E ORG N Val1>e $~sacrin~ close MI.$ Tr! AU. BARGAINS. La Linda, N.B. off 23rd SL C N RT A estate $475. 1»4-2944 aft 6 32 Note peda15. Leu than 3 PP.I
NO JUNK! GARAGE Sale: TV's, 1tauf~ months okl. PW $4995 •• =-~==~~---
673-7573 Jer Ible, exercycle, clothes, Asking $3250. See al: 'SS CHEVY 4-dr, V 8 ,
PATlO Sale Sat-SUn. 6/28-29 loys, an!iques & misc. Sat & Gould Music ComP41ny overdrive, $150; 3 • s P
' am-5 pm. 115 30th St. NB. Sun. 21125 Freeport Ave., 21'.HS No. Alain, SA 547-0681 Eligl~sh racer bike $35:
Small sz-ladie~ clothe!1 &t HB. I ~...,.~~-~----1 Lamina~ wood skis & ~-toys. books, misc. t.flNING tools, plumbing, HAMMOND. Steinway ·Ya· poles $20. 337 B Broadway
....,, "'13 . ts ~·-1 maha • new l:. used pianos C. Msa. alter 4 pm .,,.,....., Plll" ' ....-n: · 11 t 0 v e 1 • of all makes. Best bu.ya in ·==,_..-_,..:c;:.... __
PATIO SALE: Sabot $125. dishes, clothing, m i s c • So Call( right here WHITE naugah.yde recliner,
Sm. re.frig, 11ink, surrboard items, m Costa Mesa Sl, Sc:RMIDr MUSIC CX> $15, dinette table " 6 Chain
$1.G, misc tools &: furniture. C.t.f, 1907 N. t.1a\n, ., $75, green damask llOla, 18th
1996 Fullerton Ave. Cl\f. Sat GARAGE SeJe -June 21·28-Santa AJU& century style, $50, 2 new
A SUn. 548-5030 29 Indian crafts, turniture, tires 7.75-14. All in good
I I_._.__ ELECT R 0 NI C Piaoo, eond. S46--0347 GE Sale. Sal-28th 10 &Jnps, Cuuit:S, tools, much portable, plays lhru Hl-Fl.t-----·----
am • t p.m. Clothing, toys. more. 852 Cortez $t., C.J.t. Jdeal -for beach t-.ome, PAINTING? ,
boob. jewelry, misc. 004 SAT. l sun. .i.s, lamps, mountain cabin, boat or EX-PAINTER now ~her,
Jhrigold Ave., Cd M , chain. tables & misc. Items teaching. Only $495-tenns. quality pa_lnttnc wkends, VII·
.~ under $50. aYI Donepl. Nf:.iVPORT ORGANS &aa-1530 cation. rfff estimate.
GARAGE SALE • Fabuk>ul! CM. PIANO & ~nch Gulbransen. 54G.Q062 ,
HJ.n equip, clothes " RUMMAGE SALE Walnut finish. Uke new. CUU.JGAN Water Softener
..,... D E. Bayfroot, 826 W. 19th St.. CM. 2528 Little Ion Pl. , C.M. ?\lark ll, fulJ.y auto. used 2
JlllDa, bland. Fri It Sat 9:lM pm. $500, yn .. Like new. 1150 Fur
E SALE: Optimist GARAGE sale Lldo Island PLAYER Piano-Starek. Good .jackl!t, lined Excelk!ftt cond.
Club 4!D & l'lUt St., CM. Sat & Sun. June 28th & 29Ul. condition, $400. 1"°$Z.~96&-~.,."'°"=----
Sal t -....C-344 Via Udo Soud. •897-M3611r 3x12 POOL. filter I. ITtftP!'r.
~PC -. -chn. GARAGE SALE-WANTED ..... m<lal ·-..... W/ !'lfc. .. cart 1: mJ.ac, 160 2fCZS aubhouse Rd., CM SPINETS " GRANDS chr. Phone-tender, 6 mo old, ~ See .... $<20, ... .. Sl30. 'ff. WD.lcrn. ...... m&f· 6J&.363J 80-2410 &t or Sun.
l'OOL ...... -· .. Mloc.A -'"""'""''•-,,_ ___ _;•:.;1.:.:00 I 'e""A"'LD=IVIN'="'ll'P'M-......,~-..... -.1,!969="'CRAFTSMAN===.,.,.-zr=· ~. -..u.., m E. W'Dlua. OL 504'7'3 LADY K e n m o re auto Xlnt cond. $400. propell~ rotary t a w n
W.S-Provildal ~. haquoi&e:, I ate • 64MS1? ~ mower w/ cather, used 2 OR.EXEL-1':m9Cb mod., xlnt cond. S 8 o . UPRIGHT Plano $12.\. Sclls mo1 onty. New $11'0. Sac
fnl)""20d butrel $f5. Anti--147-.8ll5 for S195. In Storti. Mt. sa:J, ~
.,-. finr1tnm1 pi. 64UUt IGAS=~ • .,..,....---=$40=-. '"'c=-.. --.,,,,.-t.eamed CdM 67M.I023 "o"'!AL=--,;--,.,&C-5611===-.~°"""'~-
' D41LY l'DDI' WANT ~ pi, Electric ,.fl'lgtrator PIANO WANTE D ,...,_ od, tb<n alt boclt """
ooir i41:n iii lllllULTI $35. Doobl< -· 675o-01$3 <2lll 81"1~ Pvt Pa"1 -to !he phone Mill
•
----
CHECK WJTH US ·BEFORE YOU BUY No 8'ltter Prices Anphere ! ·
' . . . . .
' . BRAND NEW .1969
. STATION ' WAGON
300 t urbo-hydram•tlc. Power stHring,
pawi r br1kn, FAfTPRJ AIR CON·
DITIONING, Sonomafiiadlo, white
wi lls, custom seat cushl ''•· No. 434-.
sstz10946. READ FOR .
IMMEDIATE ~ELl·VIRY
BRAND :NEW '69 BUICK
Fully equlplf'd including VI; power 'slMrin9.
• '33279Z112541 $287'7FULL . PRICE
IMMEDIATE
DEUVEIJ.'i
BIG, BJG. BIG! i DEMON :S.TRATO~ SALE
25 TO HOOSE FROM ;....ALL MARKED .WAY DOWN I ·
'69 WILDCAT '69 ELECTRA '69 .SKYLARK 169 RIVIERA
Cu1lom 4 dr. hardtop. A'''· 1,1.,, Custom cp1. Auto. •r1n•~ AM /FM C 1 h d A 1 f f '!" u1 om I t top. v o. r1n1., IC• ,...,. 1loar, pwr brak1,, f1cfory ir, redio, pwr 11•••, pwr bi•k•s, pwr tOry air, pwr 11•1•, pwr Dr1k11,
tinl•d 91111, '4644l99CI003JI. windows, f1ctorV_ 'i.ir, tintad 91111. tinl•d ,lall, 4443791100401. 414579H1437l6.1 . .
. cu.,om h1rdt1p. f1t1.,., olr, ,....,.
1t•1r, pwr bt1k11, pwr wlndow1,
1uto frtft,, 1l•1•'ll'· 49.41JtHtJUt.
MANY· MORE! MANY MORE! MANY MQ~E!
INGS YOU . MUST SEE TO BELIEVE II· . . .
Cu•lo11t 4 dr h1rdtop.
Full pow•r, f~cfory 1ir
cond. FOY OJI
$2995
'62 BUICK
l11 .. ict1 Cp•. Full pow•r,
F1clory air cond. LUZ
"' $995
Coron•! ·Coupe. A11to.
lr1n1, }·pow•r 1l•trin9.
XEV 139 . $2495
OUR OPEL PRl~ES
START AT s1m
4 door H.T. F1c:t. 1it.
pwr Otrin9 I br•k11,
auto, f OY 1461
1595
4 •P•ed, r14'io, k11l•r.
TRH JJD
$1495
'61 CADILLAC
Sod. D•Vill•. Fu ll pow1r
l1ct. ,;;. IHXS 74Jl.
$795
1 ~ ie~r Pfi c• Anywhere
MAKE US
PROVE IT!
Cutl111 Cp•. Allio tr1111
Cutl111 Coupe. Auto.
'11n1, ,oow•r ll1•ri119.
HCl9'1 $1595
'63 IUICK
L, SaDr1. F1ct ,;, con.
pow1r 1l••r I br•k11.
IHYM41ll
$995·
Cntry. Squir•. f •ll pwr,
l•cfory air, IOQX 71))
$1395
'69 ELECTRA
Cu1fofft · Hard+.,p ftl
&oth full fNWlr I ftc•
lory a!r. YW" 307 i nd
YPT '446
• SAVE $ $ $
JAGUARS
LARGE SELECTION
NEW -USED
Complete S4ilft end
S.fvice Department
"
Open Mon. thru Fri; 8 a.111. to 9 p .• -. Sat. B a.m. to 6 p.m. -Sun. I 0 a.ni •. to 6 p.ni.
. AUTHOR IZED BUI IC. OPi!~ ·JAGUAR SALES & SERVICE, ·
•
.
t
•ll!lll! ........ ~-1!1!1!"111""!'!'-!l!l!'!!'!'!!"lll!'le'!"l~!"!'!!!!'!'~~~~~~~~".":'-.:'~:--:-:--:--:-::-:-:-:-:·::::-:------...... ~ -· ...... ···-" -..... ~ .. , ... .. . .. .. . .... . ...... .... . ..... . .... . . ·-• T
• ' •
I
"
·SAVE, her!. Calleo &:. wbite
'thort·halr -kltten . ~ .. · .. .,tr
·.
•
.I
I I
···FOR . ' . • MO~ORHQM.!S
r
'.
'
r
Duno 8"9111.. 9525
'67 DUNE BUGGY
Road &: RaUey equipped,
Hardtop with 5ide curtalns.
Lie. No. UVR487
$1995
ORANGE COUNTY'S
VOLUME ENGLISH
FORD DEALER'
SALES · SERVICE
'69 MODELS
Immeclllt.te deUvery
LARGE SELECTION
Th•odore
ROBINS FORD
200> Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa &12-0010
•
• ii
• • .:i~
'59 MERCEDES 190 BL -..
OOUPE. BEAUTIFUL ·.•.i
O NE-OWNER C All. , • ·
SHO\VROOM CONDmON. • r
$1600 PV. PTY. S'B-7031 ,..,,-, . . .
'61 2'lD l\IERCEDES 4 di« ·;,•
sedan. lmmac. c o ad'. ,,..
Sacrifice $95(1, call Eve1. .;;. . ,
642-3666 l •
' ,., .
Uc;
'65 Mustang $2095 '63 Chevrolet $795 .. .,
'• .
21• • .-.i ... -evt.ln•tiC n ...... i.ii.1i•P1. paw•r AvtOMetle tre111111n.ro11. ,. ..... , 1t11ri"f· redio l"'P''' 1upet 1port co11vortibl1 , "'· •11to111•ti91
1t11rh1t . r11'10, lt11tt r, FACTORY Allt CON. tlld hetl1r, FACTORY Wtr•tnly. IUUZ564l power 1it1tin9, pow•r lor•k•1, r•dio, ht•ltr,
DITIONINe, M•9 whe•l1. IAEJ1t21 imm•cul•••. ISICC57l l
'65 Mustang · 51495 .'&5 Oldsm'obile sg95•-,65-C-h-ev-rol-et--S7-95
, Oynt111lc f t 4 Dool" htrcltop. Autom•llc, pow•r
21t antl111, •.t,Matl& lr11111t1lt11on,. 111-•• 1f•trh19, rt•io, hotter, till whoo!. IPCR9661 Moni1 coupe. RtcOo 1"4 h11ttr, 4 •Pt•d h11tt• , 1l1•rl119. rt i l•, llteNr, FAC~ORY AIR CON· mi11io11, IRUM7lll
;'"o"'"G. ':""'' ; .. , . '65 Oldsmobil.e $1295 ,-65-Ra_m_b_le-r -~· S-69-5
r :~..,
.~ (• . "'·:;,
I •·'· '·=-f~ i·,;.
63 Ra~C.herO 1 • • S595 Doll• 11 2 Door h1rdtOp. Automet1c, pow••
Thrifty ' cyliMH t Afint ) 1,1..4 tr•nM'litilo11 •h•l1t9, rt dio, hotttr, FACTORY AIR CON· ""'•rlc•11 440 co1n•tl'fiblt. Rtdlo tnd h•tter,
, ·~IG:Z~P'°'~•' ......... ·""""' .. • ........ ·.o.1TmlOmN•l~NGm,mt•ilt•w•~-·~l.•f•RG-Mm7m5m6•l ............. ~,-''•"•''•;',._'"•'~'"~;,~,;-,,~·-·~··.•.'•'•'"•"~lom9 .... ~
'
1 fllE ST,OCI ; OF VOLKSWAGENS •.• CHECK THESE VALUES.!
>t~:;:
• t 1 .. ,: .... ,.,
~,,.
~ I
' ,,_ t ' • -... . .
J ¥0Ll(SWAGEN ~ CAM~ER '.~~~'.~.: ... , .. ,., .............. 5895
. '65 ·YW 101CM11 s995 '64 VW 11914111 s795 -
18835 . BEAC·H. BlVD •· HUNTINGTON BEACH
I . 842-7781 . tt 540-0442 ,~ ... ~!!!!i!!iiiii!iii~-~ .... ~,~-.;;;.~·~.,,.ii.;.~_~iiiil;i~ .. .;~;.;~~ .. ~.;.;;_~~!!!111!11!111111 .. ;:; .... ,
•
• r, I _,
•IAO , .. :1 . .,,
l's.ti n -:. . "" ,,.
..
I
I
f
WGIP•; 00 + eo I +e -..-----~--~----------·-... ·----·~·-
OAD.YPll.OT '"""'' .-'t'I, 1969 .J. "-" ltTATIOH TRANSl'OltTATION TftANsl'ORTATION TllAiaPc>ITATIOll TltANSl'OltTATloN TUNSPOlTATION
,_...... ,._ 9600 ,..,,,..,. AulN -lmporlod AulM -lmporffll --lmporW AulN '?£''!?' AulN -AUt. w-t7aO U... cara 9'00U .;.;;;IM;.;;..oC.;.;;..;ra'---"°°-· •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 ·MG POISCHE SUIARU TOYOTA ws l!JJ .'. • -------I TllOllYTEMllmOD~T~ JIAllA : ~~~ ·~ :::£E . ~!.aC:: lflOIYJQITIAJ CASH :H~~=Y '" .~~:::~,
, • All -. ,.. to appnc. Best ollor. $1297 POE ~At lor -..,. • -ll"' VALUES Sedan, V4, """" dlr, fac:t.
• • m.oros ()pt -llO ri.IPt 11uo DEAN LEWIS r..a .......... -·· ' ·u "'-' XR-T Wdau, t:i.n~O:: ::".!... "= • '58 POJISCHE •P""CI-. W/ -...... !lei, $l3IO.!IO liR01ll OIYllOl£T air, GT ........... -.. take f<re!ri .... Clll · SU DEAN LEWIS TODA YI • "'.,.. &d. -· .._ ... + ,... ...i ......_ •• -. c.111> · ..mi '"1 -.. lanWI, !ull "'"' '9f.m! ~~· '69 TOYOTA ••OM '1790 • ..... 822 w. Balboa m.,I. IDOO W. Oooot "-· N TOYOTA -.. -M-, ;rr:,r ~·,oo, r: '67 ELECTRA ....... 2 DR No. T, N.B., SJ..100 &l$«IO * l62tJ.1 11Z11 .,.. 8hd. HT fl pwr fact air $1.llllii HT. Pit. P/b, auto.. Aft.
• 11• SAVIN•s • .•' ...,,, ,.; c:looM 'u.,.. 11.s. '"........,. m hlP . ·suN "'aM ..... ·-'"--ILJatlmcb>-'•es'llonne¥ill. ...... ,... -..,.,.., ........... .,,,
S No I -· 540-1764 BuriwxlY W/blk int. ...... ' H""""'1Altl'ERS Kl Nm dau, ft""'" lilct air • $11115 Int. AM/PM ....... new EXECUTIVE CAR ALE w • .uu...l.d"MO llealtt 153!15. 831-<0ll ELMO RE Wiii '" ' . ., Old• ... Coupe, ftol ""'· n<W -ldnl '" TOYOTA HAIDTOP ·-· -szon • ·.i MGA. MARK II I""' l'ORSCHE by ....... '67 SUNBEAM Ticer Jlf ... .J ' ...... •I ............ 11319 """· 5&-1969
'69 YOLYO SID.AN, Allt111111tfc --$2975 • t1>141tu aood oond:. Offer. :..:r =!5 Yr1ftla. 1m Beach~ WlbMIQ' Your Volbwq:en or Pancbt ./'SJ Cadillac coJMrtibM, ft '62 JNVJCTA. f.d.r hdtop. air,
WI Niii YOUI TUDf.IN • $850 • • 6M-3XJl *6'75-3673* pm. Pbant ....., A PU tpp 6:6n: Paid fix' pwr I: air •••••••••• $1!19 a pwr, sea. Alto •• vw.
"'.oulwtMUJIDCAlOIPT. '62 M~ =bl k iii.,.,,.,_ ........ llJnt .......... Call_ f '6SM-V4otick!989 nd, htr, $lliO. 215 E.
• .µ. ........, • • · TOYOTA j rM • .:. ·..-__ • wu .... ""-51S-11'3 wll'ld ~Tilt. .,.., cond. ROVER -~ 'Ill -. lo -. Wiii 6'l34llO for !he ' NEW TO)'OTA MK II • o&-ms';ait. 4·p.m. " lw/ bll<o, IUI, ott. IG4lll WE PAY TOP . STATION WAGON SET '64 BUICK Rivl•ro. .. ., pwr
NOW ON DISPLA y • '59, ROVER, IQ. ' eyt., 1 BIIL MAXEY: ,-. DOLLAR ' ... Dodi•"'°""°· • .... ~ .... .. •• ,,,. J1599 • OPEL ownor. Sl.IXIO mlleo, ..... 00 for -. dull .., can,. Joct air, ll,000 mi, """
• I••""'· p/b, topabape. U95. ITli'\IVINT ....... H all -S.. Geors• n.,. · °"""' .............. $3315 '62 SKYLARK conv. P/~! 545-5913. • ~ _ ~ 'lbeodore Robins Ford ./ '65 Jtambltr Oauk, auto auto, MW lop, ortc onr _...
• '66 OPEL Waaon. :n.ooo ml. llM1 BEACH BLVD , "'TltJUilPH ~ -218) -Blvd. A air .............. llLllO .. but. 6'1>-4321
• Exc!p&nal c:and. Must sell .•· l eofl~. $19)0. Call Mn. C.M. 6U-Cm.O # '65 hkob, auto I: rtal '65 RIVIERA. all equip •
...,.,., by wlml. 963-1'97 SPRITE Hunt. 8Mch "74555· IWldn, ~ clean ................ 1989 ...., clwL Nd• "°"" .,.; DEAN LEWIS
Onftll ~ T.,.. •• Vein ....,.... Jet.M61 • '61 OPEL ~ Kadett xtl. 3 m1 N. ot OJUt Hwy. on Sch ~ Aute Lanlnv 9110 ./ '63 Mercury, Co&ony Park. $21JIOfbnL 6'M5H
1'6' HAllOI IOUUYAID, COSTA MISA • <and wm 11nanco Don •59 SPRITE Good """""" • power -brakn 1818 ·=''=~""---,--:-d
• • • • •· ! • • • • ! • ·• • • • ·• ·• • ff.,." 11-S. w.0013 ' <and. $425. Cail~ g pm. 1968 TOYOTA VO' i.-"Al!.EN ,., LEASE ,., I '<o Folcoo, a~lo and '51 BUICK con.en. Full
RfAD DI DAILY PILOT CWSlflfD
DARY PILOT BEST IN TIE WEST
H ..,.__ '"~· ~W • -~· ~ cl .. -.. •Am pwr., xlnt rnech-cond. $200 546-6419 j ., ....... -;r ...u ....... de VWt. pwr -.... ................ --Or Best Offer m-1w
DAILY PILOT DDIE-A. $1695 0 •ff VW'I wind, kay •t • dr loclm. " LINES. y.., cu .. them IS YOUR AD IN ~ • WI o1r w11J, air ...... -lllO'!(, nNANCING OAC frr just pmmin a day, Dial FIED? Someone wU1 be LJc. No. WJ1S7119f..1321J Dlr nmnr:DTAT!!J>EUVDY lQ' &ta.a, AM/l'M, w/l/w. MORE TO OIOOSE FROM!
&ea11 lookinc tor tt Dial ~ SOCK rr TO 'EM! Bu* ,,,,.netrc 1-$115 mo. Pactflc Co.st Motors
$21J DOWN SOUTH COAST 14061 llHch llvd.
CADILLAC
·,:;;.o===---...;.;==;.....;;;o..~==='o:IOO::: Pl~im,.:. ~"' CAR LEASING Wntmlnster '67 CAD D Dando. private
-----------------------ttile, l'ull 2 ''" 24,000 JOO W. C•t Hwy, NB 645-2182 * 893•5038 * !'::.tr. :ri:'.1 ..:.'~'ste:!'.
ml wananl;y, Ava.D onl7 at FIRST TIME! Xlnl cond. $4895. 454 Boltro T & M MOTORS !Aue a New 'Ill tar 6......, w.,., NS. ~
I08l Garden Gr'OW Blvd. A return with DO obltp.Uon. '65 CAD Coupe ck Ville torc-
SU.2214 at Beach ~ Call Mr. MalcobD Reid tor ed to aell. Car ill lmmac. OPEN SUNDAY .Fu.D Detan. Now ~ 30,000 ml. Full .... 12."5. ~ V.W. 01MMACULA~ Ford Allthomed JJY. pty. fl68..28f0
AM·l'M, Sunn:lof. 19.tm ml. Uuiiw System '65 SEDAN deVllJe, like new
MUil aen. 673-1ltS. Th1odare Inside Ir. out. All utru.
Ro.INS FORD wheel, stereo tape, TM.
AT UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
VW '62, .... cond. bal ottor '68 DATStJN UOO Spt ltdot '°"'6o3 tak~-u1N'!e ~ rttent 20!0 Hubar Blvd. • .................. ; •• , $2098 ~'63'""'Cpe-,o.=-"vu"'te-.,,lll=-o-rm=.I
ow .... · -O:llta Ma• IG-m10 '65 PONTIAC Le Mans, 326. lea.th int, full pwr I: air, D s
A c
NU s
GA ' •
WIN UP TO s10,000
Co me In And En te r Today!
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
'63 !.~~!VI, oulo.,
P.I., l&K. (LUM430) ·s395 '67 !~.~~.~.~ ......... p.a .. P-wlnd. (0JD2U) $2695
'65 ~~~~~~~ ..... $2595 '67 !!,~.!!~~., ...... s3 49 5 P.S., P.I ., P.W .. P.fb.. VI, •uta., P.I .. P.L, P.W.,
ll&H. (XNJS26) ' P-th, fKt air. (TVHf7S)
'65 !~.~~ .. !~ .....
(PIVll1} $1095 '64 ~!~!.·~~ro4M,
hHtv. (OWKIMJ $79 5
'67 ~.~~~ ... ~! ...... P.L (P0%D76) $2195 ' 64 !~~.'!.VI, out~
(NOY74') $4 95
'66 DODGE
PolarL vt, •ut.., fftt.
a ir .. P.S., P.L (STH154) $1595 '65 !~~-.ra41~ J.51 Vt •nt .. H.D. camper
eciul,....ent. (1161DAJ
$1595
. 2850 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
540-9640 .
--~-----
1918 VW-PORSCHE wheels, v.a console shift, ps. real new titt1, Gd cond Pr pt;y
_... ttm. """'1 "'"'-UIM Can 9900 ,...;,., Bwpndy .... $1499 $1495. 841--1191
Mll'lt amd. ~'1198 '62 OIEV Impala, HT c:pt, $ 2 5 o EXCEPTIONALLY
'61 vw, sunroof. radio, lf,OOO ,DAVID L. FRASER v..a. auto, ps, clean •••• ~ clean. "'fj Cad. Go od
mt Xlnt COhl!. one Olmet. 42 Alden Ortter, '61 FALCON, 2 dr, auto $299 m hM" n l c a 11 )'•See to ~2.WI afl 5:30 top ilbape! ·········• Sl?.SOO '61 MERCURY,. dr, Pf $199 believe' ~ :::::-=,.......,.,----,,~140' Owtns Ott.tu, cu.itom Iii" Many othtts to cbooee from ,==~,,,· '=--'=-=-..,--:-1 '61 VW plck+Qp. ttetntly sine 1: Alli, cwner muat all e TERMS AVAILABLE e LIMOUSINE 1960 Fleetwood,
ovt'l'bauled. $950. !)OW! Askins only ••• $17.!IOO 2 alr oond. froDt A: back,
646-1773 32' ToUy (67) only 36 hn. hoV Now·,, THE jump eutl. $525. 962-7198
'68 VW aulomalle, Sunroof oold, rad~. DF, FIB, llps • '67 CADILLAC D e V 111 e
radio, Eitru. lQnt amd. lnoped and Otter. TIME FOR convl Top cond. lull¥ eq>llp.
after 6:30. 673-tMI Call: O!uck AYft"f "-'UICI( CASH * 615-4244 *
'67 VW Sedan. lmmoculoi.t 3424 Via Oporto, Newport "P '62 Coupo O.Vll!e
New ttm.11495. mo'52 * ......,_, .,,... THROUGH #4 700 Mori~. C d M.
m.4165. 543-5066 NO matter what JI lo. ,.., DAILY PILOT 834--2343"' 673-M85
"66 vw Sunmot 1500 cc. can seu Jt Mth a DAILY W D
Runs rreat. New pt.Int job. PILOT WANr ADii 6G-$67I ANT A Dial 642-5671 for RESULTS
$10'l5. 64+-0356 -'64 vw. Sunroot Rodlo. R.,.r lmpor!M ....... 960G Imported Au... fflOlmoorted ,._
windowa open. $950.
* !546-33'15 *
'66 vw Sunroof. UiOO cc.
Rani creat. New paint job. ,.....,.. .
1C FASTBACK Sta Wp 1un
roaf, AM/FM, , $ I t 0 • m.oea I
·59 vw sreat lbape? b1adt
naug. Int. $475 or best: oft
M7-1565
'67 VW Sqback. Xlnt cond.
Lo mlg. Must sell this we!k-
end. 4N-2515
1960 VW w/IWU'001
$lSI),
* * 673-3764 * * '68 vw
Call 6l>OSa
11650. R/H, tape deck.
'67 VW BUG, IL Noe W/(TY.
Int. Many extras. mmt aelll
Call Qril; 675-2757
1967 vw ....
11800
214/439-4142
'61 VW SEDAN
C:all 646-1"60
'63 vw $695
Private Party. 549-27T1
VOLVO
VO LVO
Bost Ooals Are At
DEA N LEWIS
1966 llarbor, C.M. 646-9303
·59 VOLVO -645-2$11
Anff-C1-la 9611
MODEL T l'«d, ooupe boid1,
fmdfn I: aome perta. $125.
784 Newton W~. o.ta
Mesa. 10-2 weekdays
WE PAY Wit
FOR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
CHMOUT · __ .....
°""' .... !111-UllO
CONFIDENTIALLY
w.h><-Fer -Or-Clan PAID l'OR OR.,NOT•
I. J. SPORTSCAR
CENTIR 2&13--· ei.1:1. Mesa MIM4S1
You 'l.I Lov e . .
O~ur .. &li gs
< •
lt'1 fli• c•r tliet
won't 9lvo you
0 11ythl 111 to
WOrrf 0D•11f. w. 111••• 1uro
ofth •t. w.
,;.,. it th• vw
I •·p•l11t ••htv
a 11 cl p•,fo,11'1•
•nc a t•1t. It ha1
Low, Lew Prlca
.. 111-
SPICIALLY
PllCID IUGSI
fe pan. So •• t.i•• It Ollf
I 00 °' t Y•ra11t•• that w•'ll ,,_
pl •c• •II rnaj•r rn •ch111lc1I
p•rh' for 10 cl•y1 or I 000
ll'lil11, which1v.,-co11111 fir.t.
h11 't thet wket a II•• c.•t·•wn•r
111M1l A but tliet won't clri¥•
'rOY llYh.
'H GHIA 'H VW '67 POHCHl
COUPI SfUA•I IACI t l Z COYPI
··~ with black l11t•rior. ... with bl•ck int•rier. l lu• with bl1ck l11t•rior.
Skew1 •Xt•1I011t c.a••· So Ec•11oml1al 1urn111at '"' Chrom• wh••l1 -XTltAS.
nl•• 011 th• roacl. 11:111111• 11r. ltadi• l ho•f•r. Extr• FM r•di• l h••t•r. ~11
tOell'I f•t ••cfdi•t l p•ft. rnil••t• ii t •••• •11 tki1 I: haat•r. lie. No. PIY 161. l ie. Ne. YTU 144. 111ocl.I. l lc. N•. SVZ I ll.
$1499 $2099 $4799
''1 vw '61 vw '64 vw
SIDAN SIDAN CAMPER
l h.t• with contr•1ti1111 Inter· ll110!' witli off.whit• 1i1t111I•· ld••I 1um111•r Ci t -l•tt ,.,, ,.01. ' h ••• ., ...... t14 •l11yl rMf. R.clio I of r•om. lt•di• 011d h••f•r. tif1I •rl9i111I c.•r. Co1111 111 h .... , .. YMr ow. cll1tinc· l'ictur• • hi' i11 thi1 1h•w• •"' ••• , ,,,.,. +hit ,.,. tiva liffl• c•r. l ie, N•.
Lie. No. WIA 011. VZT 021. pieca. lie. No. JICS t 41.
$1699 $1799 $1899
'64 vw ·n vw '" vw SUN aoo• IOAN SID.AN FAITIACI SIDAN
O..l9i11at ,,,., fi11;.h, ltHi• c.,.1 with rn•khi1111 ifllfor• Orlti11al ~it• ft11i1h1 r•cll•
I h•at.r, lew 1t1l111t•· lie. l••: tir11 aro nic1, t••ll•, a heater. w •• ~.nc1 ,, •• 1.1
No. IEV 107. h••*•'· fr•1h•r th111 1 l'tlc.•. Uc. Ne. ltHX t ll. cl1ily. Uc. No. VkP ti I.
$1299 $1199 $1549
445 East Coast Hwy.
et IA YSIDI Dllll. NIWPORT llACH
"
, •
.,
' •
• • ..
•
..
'
..
• ...
111111!!11---------------------------~------·----
l
DAILY ~ILDT
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT.ION ' TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
Frlclq, June 71, 1969
TRANSPORTATION
New c.,. 9IOO-c.,. 9100-ca,. 9100Now Cars 9100 -C.rs PIOO -c. .. 9IOO -c. .. tlOONtwCors
COUGARS LE!
HAVE YOU SEEN THE XR-7?
1966 CADILLAC
SEDAN DI VILLE
S+riki119 Arctic white with bl•ci: interior 111d
bl•ck l•11d•11 roof. Fully lu.-1.iry equipped,
euto. tren1., klH, PS, PW, 6-w•y s1et, fee·
tory •ir concl,. etc. ISMD 153)
1966 FORD
COUNTIY S9UllE 10 PASS. WAGON
01terl 8ei9e with rn•lchin9 i11!1rior. Lu11 ·
919e top reek, •ulometic trensmis1ion, r••
~io, heeler, pow1r 1+1erin9. pow1r b"r1ke1,
power wi11dows, c1nl1r fecin9 third 1e1t,
ftclory 1ir, etc. l ie. No. SVX 770
1966 T·BIRD
LANDAU
l rifish Gr••" t."ish with rnetchi11t i11lerief
e11d bl.ck l•"d1u roo f. Fully lu.-ury equippeil.
Autometic lrensrnit1ion, r•die, he•ter, pow•r
.te.ri 119, power br•k1s, 6·w•y seet, f•clory
•ir. l ie. No. kll 724
1964 CONTINENTAL
4 OOOl
Ebony Bleck finish with Siddle Le•lher inter·
ior, lu•ury equipped, •ulom•lic tren1rni1·
1io n, r•dio, heeler, power 1teeri119, pow••
brek1s. 6-wey ae•t, feclory eir, power win·
tlow1, low mllt1. Tred1d by orl9i111I ow111r
011 • n1w Co11tine11tet. Lie. YEP 504.
PRICES PLUS UC. AND TAX
1967
CONTiNENTAL
4 DOOlt
lo•utiful Gold Jel91 Mi1! fin ith with
11dd le l1•tf.11r i11 f1 rior e!'ld blec• l•n·
'•U roof. Fully Ju•ury equipped. Au+o•
rnetic '''"'"'in ion, AM • FM t•dio,
power ll••r.119. power br•ke1, power
wiridows, 6 · wey 1111, tilt 1f••ti"9
wht•1, f•clory •ir, door locks, ele.
E•cell eiil throu9ho11 I. l ie. No. UUY
000
It's Month-End Sale time
at Johnson and Son's! The
month end is when
we offer those
extra special deals
on those cars that we
have a large inventory
of ..••.. so come in THIS
WEEKEND FOR THE DEAL OF A
LIFETIME ••.•••
WE'RE UNLEASHING
OUR COUGARS!
1966 FORD
&Al. IOI 4 DOOl HAlDTOP
lennvcle l lu• '"•f•tlic fi11ish with melchint
i11t1rior. 152 CID e11tine. Aulornelic tre111•
mi11io11, relllio, h•eler, pewer 1teori119, flt•
tory eir, etc. l ie. No. RTk 417.
1964 CHRYSLER
NIW'°lT 4 DOOl SID.lN
W.1thintto11 l lue "'•!•Ilic fi11i1h with ftletch •
in9 int•rior. Autom•tl• tr1111111!11lo11, f.icllo,
h1•ler, pow1r 1leetin9, power brei:e1, f•c·
lory eir. Lie. No. M6F 615,
USED CAR DEPT. ·540 • 5635
+
1963 LINCOLN
CONTININTAL
4 Door ••Ill•"· Gollll Mitt fi11itfl with I.lend
leether interior. A1tMetlc trerttffthslon, t••
lll ie Ir heet.r, pewer 1teori119, pewer bre•••,
power wlll4low1, •·w•y 1e1I, f1clory eir,
Lie. No. l&P 776
1964 FALCON
MUIA
2 do•r herJtep, 260 VI, Arctic White witt.
furquol1e l11terior, eut.fllefic lre111ml11ion,
rellli• ertd heeler, power 1t.eri119. A r••I
100111 treliu•li111 apeciel. llH Ill.
. .
~ ~ rm © (!JJ oo w 0 © © (!JJ@ & oo
I . .
J 2626 HARBOR BOULEY ARD1 COSTA MESA
UMd Cors 9900 Uood Cor1 __ ""'" _____ ,
CHEVROLET iloRD WANT AD ORDER BLANK Used Cars 9900 Used C•r1 9900 Usad C•r• 9900
i:=:...C:.:A:.:.M_A_R_O__ CHEVROLET CHEVROLET ----·····----·----·· --------------~-··"-------~ . ....._._.. .... .._ 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES
• . ' • . . ' .. .
·ss CAMARO 3 speed std. RI
If, PS, yellow w/blk int:,
Heart attack, must sell. Pr1·
~tc party. 633-8412
'62 S\V Bel Air V8 pwr/S, '55 CHEV 2-dr good eng. '63 CliEVY, 4 dr, dlr. 6 cyl. '66 Country Squire
Air, rebll, eng. $575 Clean. Good tires. $200. 646-9516 x1nt cond. $75. Cash deb,, IM.ded. Factory ail', XI.NT
546-9655 t"VCS. days: 642·~ fine bill $475. HAK804, Call cimd .• dlr, pwr 1teering,1----0 --0 ---0 ---1---,--::2--r--:4-0 --::--r----1
-58,-..,.CH'"E"V--,.,..,--,---,k,--! '59 CHEVY-6 CYL. Ktn, S45-C634 e mls. on ipeedorneter. TIMU TIMU Tl~U Tl~ID
'68 camaro ash gold. Xlnl
oond. 14,000 mi. 327 auto.
494-2605
CHEVROLET
'64 CHEVY V..S J(npala, 1
Q'Wncr. 38,000 miles $/:;i(). or
best offer. 642-0406
'" $100 0;' best o~f:;'Clr • 3-SPEED $135 '64 CHEV Impala, V-8, 4 1pd, Y bt.ige exterio!, match-1----1----1·----1----1----1:-==--1-..:.:='-ll-==--J--!!~~I
Call 96!H614 548-5084 dlr., pert. running cond. i91'. ln te!'lor·. New ~s. $175 •
Take foreign car in trade.~. Will Lin~ pri ply, LB1----1----l·----1----1----l·---·l----l----l----I '55 Chevy \Vagon 1962 IMPALA 409, >I speed \Vil.I fine. prvt prty. SBRM7, 'l'AY 279, -494-9773
SHKI. positraction, good cond in & Call Bill, ~9773 ·si FORD StAUon Waaon. V·•----1----1·----1----·1----ll-$_4_.5_0_,1_$6_.IO __ l __ S_l0_.6_S_l_$_15_.90 __ 1 64&.8751, after 6 out. $875. 675-4ll6 ~ auto PIS PIB n rn ' .~==,.-.,,,-,..-,,-...,.-lii(,; OlEVY lmpal'I. SS. ' ' ' '"""· $5 10 $8 28 $13 10 $20 10 '63 Bil. Air 4 dr. 6 cyl. Auto. •55 CHEVY J-lurst. 3-spced. Pl · nd w rubber, eood cond. • ' ' '
Orig. owner. 37,0XI mi. Nu rebuilt engine 283. Mags & ~· :,:· ~-a~ 8"JO. SeeB toAlappbamreclate.HIS07B 1----1----l·----l----·l----ll----I
Tires, clean. $850. 548-6m good ti~s $400. 546-9092 aft 6 pm. ~t. ., a a.-• . $6.00 $9.76 $15.55 $24.30
'65 CHEV. Impala P I b, '62 Chevy SS lmpa.la Conv. -~------• ~·· 1----'------'----...L..---.._ __ _.._ __ ...L.. ___ ,__ __ _._..;.... __ I
Pis •• ~. tilt wt.<el. J27 ,,,.. orig. own•r. $500 -------•'~FORD Ctn,y S<d, V-<, ao PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 TO Pl.VU COST
CHARGE IT! •545-63!0* cash"' b<st. 64W3< CONTINENTAL I~ db-. x1nt """'-lnsldo & ==;;;:=>======:-:-===.=;-~==:,:='-';==;'';":":==.;:=::-o1'f. $75 cash dels or foreign
9600 9600 '67 CONTINENT AL. 4-door, CV in trade UEV 484, call
rut enty en• ..... t11 Meli
1111ce 1be.,.. h1clucle ye"
eddr111 er phene n11m1Hr.
The ce.t ef yowt ed Is It tM
end •f tlie 1111• •• which '"
l11t "'"Ill tf yeur 1d II ,..,, ..
ten. "'4111 $2.00: edr• H .,..
il•tire 111e ef DAILY PILOT
•••• .,...1 .. •ltfi ''""" , .. si:ll•a.
/,
BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
EASY ON MONEY SALE!!!
a. Quick .. , Get First Pick on the Money SaYin9
Choose v .... t.w(.:. n,:I imow-Todoy
e COROLLA
2 DOOR SEDAN
SPRINTER
STATION WAGON
e CORONA
4 DOOR SEDAN
t DOOR HAADTO' COUPE
•CORONA MIDI
-4 DOOR SEDAN
2 DOOR HAfl:DTOf' C,E, ~1rderl' e CROWN e LAND CRUISER 4W DRIVE
'4 Dlt SEDAN-4 Dlt, WAGON SOFT Ol HAlOTOP STATION WA60N
BANK TERMS e YOUR OWN FINANCE
4 Speed • Autom•tlc • Air Cond. • Ltnd•u Tops • Color• G•lor•
BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
11111 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON IEACH
847-8555 ..... y , ...
-----------
li!c blue sedan, white Lan-lqln. 494-9773
da.u top .. run p/a.lr, low .65 FORD_Co_rtl_oa_ota_w_•<-. -,•
mileage. Lido Isle. 613-2559 •fl• dlr, extra clean, reblt
'65 ON£..0WNER., lo ml. full. e,.-, $T15 balance to fin. NGR
ly oqp"d. M"'t "'-$16'0. "' f BIU, 5<>0634
best oUr. days: 549-1174 Sale: 1964 Ford Conv.
eves: ~ cond $695. 1959 El
0 · gd. rond: 348 '""· C RYAIR SJ1K1. 1001 eo'"'"' ......
Pub li1h fer ••• •••••• ,d1y1, b19lnnlnt ••• •• •• , • ·••• •• •••• •• ••,, ,, ••. ••
Cle11!flcetio11 •• , , , •• , , , • , , , , , , ••••••• , , , •• , , , •••• , .....•..•..•• , •
Neme ••••••••••••••••··•···••••••••••••··••·••••·•••········•••
Addreu , •· ••••• , , ••• , ••• , , , , •• •. •• •• ,,,,,., ••••••••••••••• •• ;,.
City ••••• •• •••• •• •••••• •••• •• ••• Pheft1 , , ••••• ,, • , •••• , ••• •••'•
~. n&s Alfl'OMOTIVE,1-----------CUT HUI-PASTI ON YOUl IMYILOn ----------·· COLLECTOR'S Item '6 2 US Roche1te:r, CM 646-1356
Corva.ir. aut~ trans R/H, 66 'FORD Faltlane GrA.
new tn. fro t ~Y dam. JvH }'actory Air, floor auto Bc~t offer. See: 365 Ramona Mlft, radial tires., Blue book
Way, CM c*>. must sell $1115.
'62. 700 2-DR recent brla le 6'&).6121
ovrhl. gd, trs, one ownu, 1.-d!£1.."-ro=R'°'D,_,,Cloun!ry,-,---,Sed,..,.-an
$275. ~1006 W"°'1. 6 ...-rcer. nt'W
CLASSIC '63 c:otva.ir. Future Ur& 169:) or best olfer.
dunt bum, $250. 67S-Z158 847~ tmific cond. -·"":-"'on1.,.,..eoun=-=1ry=Squltt==-. ·I .
'61 ' OlRVAIRi, aoocl con-~ , nnr tlrelh p:>d cond.
dltJon. automatic. mD. ~ or oHer. 918-ll32 •50-0032• I LTD Country Squltt IUN't"' air, power atemn1 &: COUGAR .1c. S<IH™
'67 COUGAR \f8..289 Air, '60 fORO ~alaxle, :1l!W bat·
PIS, P IB $2250. Xlnt cond. 1e.,.; t /h, 69 lbc, needs lit·
'
IU.SIHlSS REPLY MAIL "'"Cl• ......... , .. c.t. .... ~ ....
' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT
P.O. lox 15'0 ,
~3910 or 61W299 Ue fmk. ~. 63&--0535
FALCON '63 kRD Folrlano. oxd. Hi. Cltnlfiod "-'.
c-. M.e, C.llf. 92626
~ 4 1pd. Many extras. -r•
MUST sru.-&1 Fakon v~. ~ -USE THIS HANDY POSTAGE PAID
air"""'· (6'15. or make ... rr·s:lfaacl! -tlme. Bir-• o· AILY PILOT ter. MG--9889 ~111ectton twrl See the
DAILY PltDT WANT ADS! OAILt." Pr;t.01' Qualtled
llJllNG l\ESULTS! ..dlcoil=:;:::_:::NOW::;:_I __ _,;. __ .... ,.-::" ... l'N'-· -:::~D_.ftEA;;.. __ ..:_H-:-rH_E_O-:· ~~·--G_EJ..,c_o_A_s_rs .... _11_G6_ES_T_.M..._,A_R_K_ET_. _. ----1
•
• I • ~• . ... ' . . . ·~ ... -.
•
I
,..,...,...,--~------·---------------------·--e ·--·----------
• •
\
ft DAILY 'ILOT F•idlJ, J,,,, 27, 1'169
• ~n::wn:.c.:.5;,.P01t,..;.;T.;,l"T'"IO"'N" --------~---_-_-_-_-_-TRANSPORT~ :.1~ -
; Mow c.,. 'tlCIONtw Ca,. 9IOONow Coro 9ICIO
fRANSl'OltTATION ._c;;;··.
•
1968 CHRYSLER ,
9 passenger Town &. Country wagon. l\Iai;i:c
yeJlow wi th saddle \•inyl trim. Full po\.1-'t'r, air
conditioning, luggage rack, tilt steering .,.,•heel,
low mileage. {VTP97l I
1967 CADILLAC
C.Oupe OcVille, Phantom blue with blue leather
interior. Full power equipment plu!I factory air
conditioni na::. One owner. CUJA357)
1967 CADILLAC
Cvt. De Ville. Sandl"wood wi th match·
ing leather interio r. Full 1K1wer plus factory
air condit ioning, tilt·tclescopic steel'i ng wh('('I,
Stereo AJ'>l-FJ\l radio. Low miles. IXSP6921
1965 CADILLAC
f lcel\•'ood Brougham. Black with :sih·rr bro·
cadr interior. Full po"·er pins fact ory air con·
ditionini:;;. All options. {RTI'056)
1964 RIVIERA
Po"·der blue \\•ith matchinr \•inyl bucket
scats. Full po\,·er and factory air condition·
fni:;, many extras. (HGT856)
1966 CADILLAC
Coupe Dc Vill!!. Grecian gold \\'ilh matchini::
rloth and leather interior. full pov>er, factory
11ir, t ilt and telescopic wheel, VOG"UC tlrci.
!SBC984l
9100New C1rt
CADILLAC
NINETEEN SIXTY-NINE
' ON DISPLAY AND READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY!
SALE s4222
SAVE
SALE $3888
PRICE
SALE $3666
SAVE
SALE $2333
PRICE
SALE $1555
PRICE
SALE $2999
PRICE
1969 COUPE DE VILLE
Jo"ull power and factory aJr conditionlni:;.
AM·Fft! radiO, power door locks, po\.\'cr
trunk opener, All leather Interior and
padded t op. CJ9104235)
OVER 80 QUALITY
AUTOMOBILES
TO SELECT FROM
•
SALE PRICE
1968 EL DORADO
Full po\vcr, factory air. tilt·lelcscoplc y,•hccl,
AM-FJ\.t radio, po"•er door locks, disc brakes,
paded top. CBTP094)
1967 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVille. Normandy blue with black
vinyl roof and blue cloth a nd leather lnl<'rior,
Full power, factory air . t ilt-telescopic wheel,
po\ver door locks, AA-1-FM. (Vffi785}
1968 CADILLAC
SIX!a n DeVille. EmbaJ;;sy silver "'ith hlnC"k
padded top and black clolh & leather Interior.
Full power, factory air, AJ\1-Ft.1 radio. Very
low miles. IB822692()J
1963 EL DORADO
BIARRITZ. F rost red \vil h "'hitc lea ther In-
terior. Buckel sca ts, full po"·cr and fac tory ai r
conditioning. INYF903)
1967 EL DORADO
Leather interior, padded top. full po1••er, far-
lory air, titl-tC'l<'S('opir \vbeel. l>O\\·er door
locks, strrco A~·l·fl\'I, cvccy factory option.
{WXN&l61
1963 CADllJJlC
Coupe. V8, automatic tl"ftnsmission, r11dio a.nd
heater, power steering and brakes, factol'y 11Jr
conditioninG". \Vhite with blue cloth interior.
(PEP34IJ
9100
SALE s5999
PRICE
SALE $3777
PRICE
SALE $4999
PRICE
SALE $888
PRICE
SALE $4666
PRICE
SA LE $888
PRICE
-------------SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN-----------
sALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY, JULY I , 1969
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY
Your Factory Authorized Cadillac Dealer Serving The Orange Coast Harbor Area
NABERS
2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
540-9100
Imported Auto, 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Used Cars ~~~~~~ 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used C•rt 9900 U1ed C1r1 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900
MOVING TO
Los An9eles
MUST . SELL
22 VW's By July hi
NO MONEY DOWN O.A.C.
BEST BUYS IN TOWN
Once in a Lifetime Buys!
~~~'·l ~~N14JI $599 ~l~~::::l6SI $1099
fl l 1961
Z Dr. IJIU946l
Ill 1963
Z Dr. IGNF5591
IZI 1964 z Dr. 1s1co1•1
(JJ 1965
J Dr. IX.111461
$699 m ,, .. -$1-099 2 Dr. ISLW41fl
$799-.,,-,,.,-$1299
2 Dr. IUKF9,JI
$-999· 111 "" -$ . -t D" XOWOJ 1499
$-999--ii ,-,,.,--$1699
2 Dr. IYAYJ141
BONA FIDE MOTORS
2186 HARBOR BLVD.
Costa Mesa, 646· 1113
Open Noon to 9 pm Weekdays
Sat & Sun IO to 6pm
YOUR AD REACHES
68,972 HOMES EACH WEEK
i ..
LINCOLN
l!Xi7 LINCOLN, ('Ir.an, 28.000
n1ilC!';. l.oadC"d. air. cl<'.
!\lust sc.11 fast. 67:\-5180
MUSTANG
'66 l\IUSTANG, a i r ·CO nd,
Pis, a uto, big 6, lJ,000
miles. Private. Sia;)(]. &lfi.
.,-.,-L-IN-1COLN, silvrr·i;tty. a 1 ~'~800~"~''=""~'7'~"c'1Y_· ---~
1-r.u l beauty! t.111ke (!Ucr. '66 MUSTANG one-O\\'nr S-
aller 6 rin. 61'.>--0673 cyl. auto. trans. top cond.
---------I Reas. \\lust sell by Jun!! 30
MERCURY
'67 ~1ERCURY 10 pass
Colony Park \\'ai::on. Auto
trans. P\vr tilt sl('('rtni;:. pwt'
seals. p\\T disc brks. 1111-1.
Air-<.'ond. nack new tires.
Xlnt cond. S&XIO. 67l--0194
Perfect Vacation car-
B1g '63 l\lcrc Colony Park
\\'a~. f\ln~ like nc~" new
lire~. rxtra1'. Only $8f5.
51g...3743
'67 l\fUSTANG, completely
loaded. 389 eng. vinyl top.
/\IC. XLNT col'Ml. t.lust
sell . 54S..2376 day or nigh!.
'&.;; ?.JUST ANG 4 spd. 289.
Excel cond. Lo1v mileai;r..
$1~50. 543-8458 E v e s .
5-ll)..1436
OLDSMOBILE
_•_H_-1_"1_3 _______ 1 '64 ClITl.i\~. auto, Power ---------I sll!et'ing. tact. 11 \r. Good cond. SlCKXJ. 6-12-4387 or .. .._ MUSTANG
'67 LIKE ntW, Tape, new 'EM CUTLASS V-8. a ulo,
pQlyglas11 tire!!', l ·spccd 6 Powe r steering. b u ck~ t
cyl. still on warranty. scalK. Excel cond. sm. ~1&-2699 S.16-6071
. .,.,.,....,,~m"'sr=,.,.=o-. -~~,-.. -,~.,,-1~.. OLDS '66 ~T•. Dl.X, 4-dr,
rlh, p/11. plh, 11.00) mll~. Air, Po\\"t't, SICi!r. Ii brkll.
good corvt. $12j(). 5~9-2-184 Sac. pv. ply. ~9-1107
'67 MUSTANG GTA, mRt· '66 Olds Col'l\lcrtlblc
OLDSMOBILE • • BRANO NEY:
'69 CUTLASS
Plus Ta.x & Lie.
Payments Incl ude tax 11nd
licen.~e and finance chars:es
on ·18 months. Approved
c~il. Serial No. 331119Zll.
63SI.
University
•• Oldsmobile
:!~ I-Tarbor (0$ta h1esn
540-9640
PLYMOUTH "his, new Ure11, Marp! v.ilh pov.;er. A~l lfl\1 rftdio
$199:1. !'>1~1449, ~374 • !168-319.'i . 1----------1 ---c1~9Gl OLD~ '69 Plymouth Roadrunner,
BUSIEST m1rketplace In ru "''atron $150. Aflcr :i pin. copper w/matchln&" vinyl
10\\'n. The DAILY PILOT 6'12.-4 494 lop. Nc11r new c o n d .
Claulflcd Sl'Cllon. Save 1---------RfaflOMbly prl~. &t~
morwy1 time Ir effort, LocM1 '11tE QUIO<En YOU CALL, 'i7-PL YM°ciUTH-$1100.
now!!! 11i.E QUICKER YOU SELL • 64S.JT.» *
. .
PONTIAC PONTIAC
DRA1'1EO! t.lus l sell ·;iS 19611 PONTIAC GTO 3 spd,
Ponti<1t'. i::ood paint & au!o, P/s, cordova top,
upholstery. Good lircs & st~reo tape. Can finance.
hr:ind new <'llS:illC' &· tn:UIH. Contact 531-7474 or 673-0029
S17:i. 646-8014
PONTIAC
NEEDS A LITTLE \\'ORI\
196.1 Grand Pds coupe. 1llr
WADED. f"f'R~l9 SJ.:iO.
194-7503
RAMBLER
PRE·O\V"Nf:O
BIG SELECTION
'61 THRU ·~·s
ALL t.fODELS
FR0~1 $~. • • • • BRAND NE\V '69 SW
642-6023
T·BIRD
RARF.. cl11s~ic '.-Ill T·Blrd
RUNS GOOD
~a<'1'11!cr S:..".Ci. •lfl1-1069
·y; 2DR11r :-n·d. a1r, auto,
t"P, AMlfilf, IQ nil, like
nl'\I', $2 lj(), 5·1fi.. \j68
'j6 T·BlRD comp 'I-,~,-,-, ,-1
l"f'.~lol"M. lilake o I I e r .
673-5308
CLA~'!Ce--.~-~.~T~-~B~ll~lU7_ro_n_i
V<'r1iblr. $1000 or bC's1 offer.
p\', p!y. 61.>-.-~I)
VALIANT
1..<itr '6.'i •lo(lr. Vfllianl. One
Oll'rtt'l', A1C, rad1Q.
SR!::1 J!l 14<12
DON 'T JUST \\'!Sii for iromt'-
thini: to furnl~h your honl<'
. . , find great buys II to
day·~ 011MWM Ads.
..
•
-,
• • •
,
,
•
•
• .. -~ .· ..
~-• -,,
.•
-
Frlday, Ju"' 27, 1'69
IT'S TIME F.OR ROi:' CARVER'S GREAT · SUMMER SALE!
EXECUTIVE WAGON
l r1nd N1w '69 £i1cutiv1 ••9011, C1m10 white witfi
9old inf1ri1r. Turbo hydr1m1tic, pu1h button r1dio,
il1luJ11 b1lh, p1w1r 1t.1ri119 l disc "•••••· finf1d"
91111 111, P'""'' t1il t•l1 window, AIR· CONDI·
flONING, WSW. 1256369CIJl ... IJ
EXTRA SPECIAL
TEMPEST COUPE!
. .
CATALINA WAGON
l r111d N•w 'i9 C~f1lh11 w1901S. Ch1mp19n1 with
gold lnttrior. Dttor 9rp. turbo "vdr1"'1tic, pu1h
button radio, d11ult• b1lh, power •l11rin9, ti11!1d
wl11diit.i1ltl, AIR. CONDITIONING, H.O. 1pring1 I
1hoc•1, front ,fleor m1fs, WSW. 12S2369Cl31'4001
•
lr111d Ntw '69 T11'lpt1t 1port cou,.1. D1cor 9roup,
tul•ll'ltlic fr1t11mi11iot1, Jtuih b1,1tl1t1 r1d i1, po w1r
1f11ri119, whit1 1id1 w1U fires, Antiq1,11 9old fini1h
""ilh bl•ck inl1rior. [23l17tll6032201
lre"4 New '6t Fir1l>JrJ 400 H.T. Ceupe. W11wk k
blue with wh it, corll!ov1 top erMI blu1 h1!1rior.
T11rbo hydr1m1tic, 1ltr10 r1dio, ~•mot1 ouhicl1
111irror, Rtllv II wh1tl1, cot11ol1, pow1r 1l11ri119,
power di1c br1k11 , fitited 91111, AIR CONDITION.
ING. !223J7LllJOJ9), Windo w1lick1r price
$4713.8]
$2992 ' •
I
CUSTOM S WAGON
!rind N1w '69 Cuilom S W1go11, Antiq111 9old
..,jfh ll'l1ichi119 i11!1rlor, d1cor group, JSO VI, turlio
~t4r1m1lic, pu1h button rtclio, pow1r 1+11tif19, !inf·
,id .~nd1hi11d, pow1f f•il 9•!~ wi11dow, du•I lriin9•
t•il t•l1, whif, ... 1id'1 W•ll 'tir11. (2JSJS9Zl25959)
• EXTRA SPECIAL
FIREBIRD!
SAFARI WAG.ON BONNEVILLE WAGON
lr1nd New '69 L..M1n1 51ftri ""'9 ... • C1m10 iv1ry
wifli gold interior, )50 VI, turbo hydr1m1fic, '"'h
button r1d io, d1lu•1 belh, pow•r 1t11rin9, pow1r
br•kt1 ,linltd wincl1hitW, pow1r !1il 91!1 window,
Alk CONDITIONING, WSW, ridii ind li•ndlt119
p1ck•91. ll39l69Zl2071ll,
SERVICE DEPARTMENT
OPEN
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
7:30 ·A.M. to ~:00 P.M.
•
SALES DEP:ARTMt:NT
·OfliN 8:00 A.M. to
9•llf P,M. EYERY. DA Y.
JI ••
;
'
l r•nd N~ '6t lot1n1Vi11t w19on. Cordow1 fop,
turbo hvdr1rn 1lic ,11f1·l·lr1d, fo1m cinhion, re•
mole mirr.or, d1 lux1 h1lh, wir1 whl, di1c1, cu1tom
1leerin9 wh!., pow1r 1!1erit19 l di1c br1k11, lug·
!il•t• c1rri1r, finf.d 9l1i1 ,pow•r windows, A1R.
CONDITIONING. front floor mlh, WSW, pu1h
huttoft rMio, ll62469C 1116731~
THE WHOLE SUMMER IS AHEAD! ••• 1
CATALINA
Brtnd N•w 1969 C1t1lin1 Coup•, C111'1eo ivory
••+•rior with 9ii1d vinyl inl1rior. 01cor group, fur•
bo hydr1m1ti1 lr1n1rT1i 11io~, p111h button r<td io,
pow1r 1leerin9, fint1cl win.d1hield, white 1id1 ""'II
tir1.1, d11u~• 111! b1l h. l252l79Cl206J9)
$3337
i
I
••• AND THE BEST DRIVING IN '69 IS YET TO COME!
GRAND PRIX
l r1nd N1w 1969 Gr1t1cl P•it. C111'1eo ivory with
gold i11!1rlor, corclowt f1p, !~rbo hyclr1rntfic fr1n1•
mi11io11, pu1h button r1clio, <il•lu•1 •••I belh, wi,..
wh1el di1c1, p1w1r 1f1trin9, ti11l1cl 91•11 all, Allt
CONDITIONING, whil1 1idt will tir11. f276579P·
102771 1
$4419
PRICES INDLCATED ARE, OF, COURSE, PLUS LICENSE AND TAX.
Br•nd N•w 1969 Bonnew;U, 4 Door h1rdlop. Lib·
<trly blu1 with bl1clr cordov1 top •11cl bltck lnt1r•
ior, Turbo hydr1m<tlic, pu1h butlo11 r1d io, door
•d9• 9u•rdi, d111 I 1xh111ih, pow1r 1f11rln9, pow1r
br1•11, •oftrty 91111, pow•r window1, h11d ••·
1tr1inh, AIR CONDITIONING, whit• 1icl1 will
fires. 1262l99CI06575)
BONNEVILLE
DAILY PILOT ,.~ .. .,
,
• j
·-' • ' ,_
j
•
I
Wl·N!
----..-----------·-----------·--------~-----.--~ -~---~ ---~---·-------·
.
FREE ' USE· OF A
DE.LUXE· CAMP£R ·
FOR ONE WEEK
SINCE .1921 •• ,
Your generous patronage -and confi-
Clence in ""' dealership hes made us
proud to be •·part .o.f Orange County
an~ it's phonomenal growth. Thanks to
our countless friends for a wonderful
48 years.
Theodore Robins, Sr.
NOTHING TO BUY! JUST COME
1IN AND REG I S·T ER. PRIZE
DRAWINGS · EVERY · SATURDAY
FREE!
DIAGNOSTI C-CHE CKS
ltegltlf<' .. win 1 ~1111 d'IKll: Clf VOii!' an c-dilfcn In Southel'fl Ct"fornla'1 llrtf Fonl Dia9nosllc cenrer. Ovll'" 1:1> 11telronk "'"' fot" utety, .. 11ab11lf't and ptrl«m.oc1, Ori.,.. 11119 v1,;.,I~ wllhwt wwry, WE'VE PULLED THE STOPS FOR JUNE!
AT 11 A.M.· . .
T1n'·Checlc1.To 'Be Given FrHI ' ' ' . " I SUPER SAYINGS WHEREVER YOU l'URN ••• VALUABLE PRIZE$
YOU NEED NOT
BE PRESENT TO WIN. , OVER 30 PRIZES IN ALL! FOR THE GROWN-UPS •• ; . KEEN STUFF FOR Tt{E . KIDS ••• 1rs
OUR BIGGEST, SAYIN'EST ,BlltTHQAY PARTY IN ALMOST HALF A
CEl'(TURY OF DOING BUSINESS IN THE HARBOR AREA ! COME
FORD
Buy GOOD SELECTION •••
I MME DIA TE DELIVERY!
OR
RENT ECONOMICAL RATES
By DAY, WEEK, MONTH.
BIG 8 FT. FULL CAB-OVER
BARRACUDA CAMPER!
Co111pllf9 wftl J-Hmer lteoN\, ID-lb. b ~ J •.w. ....
1_,. water tan, bu,,_ _. electric Hgllts, fiber t'-l...t ..
tlM, dU md dral•, delm IMllhu1-. HfetfMe Wed--'•
We .,. a fachHy outhri...t Ntlet -..... fw llfftodo. Fnr
Wl1dl. ketulcul, ~ M...._, s..hl, -' ... 1.,.
$ FULL
PRICE
NO TRUCK PURCHASE NECESSARY !
ANNIVERSARY
·SAVINGS
on
MUST AN.GS· BIG FORDS· TORIN OS
THUNDERBIRDS· FORD TRUCKS!
CHECK OUR PRICES FOR
JUNE BEFORE YOU BUY!
ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY
AUTHORIZED DEALER!
Large Inventory of New '69's For
Immediate Delivery. 3 only -New
1968's Now Slashed
For Immediate Clearance!
DRIVE A NEW 1969 ENGLISH FORD!
ENGLAND 'S NO. l SELLER,
AMERICA'S NO: 1 IMPORT BUY!
CUSTOMS * GT'1 * STATION WAGONS.
Larg• Selection of Automatics ~nd Four Spe9d1.
LAST CALL: NEW '68's!
Limited number at Final Cl9aranc• Prlce11
RENT YOU R VAC ATION
HOME ON WHEELS
LEASE YOUR CAR
fOR 6 MONTHS
MO,
· ll!f, ttELP US CELEBRATE!
'67 CHEVROlET .. $1·795 H.T. Imp.ala 4-0r. V-8, , .
auto., P.S.1 air, R&·H. · 1 IUKU1571
Fairlane. 4 • Or. Sedan. V-8, euto., R&H. IOKN-2061
~~~.~~.l~ull pow,., $14 9 5
factory itir. 2-0r, H.T. . IRPM860l .
'64 PONTIAC
$995 Tempest Custom wag.
Y.-81 fact, air., auto.,
RIH, luggage r a c k. IFNA6461
'64 CHEVROLET
$895 l•I ·Air '4. Or., Auto.1 R&H, f1ctory 1ir. l YTL·
8811
:6: ~:!!(cu.tom.$159 5 Auto., PS., R&H. ITRJ. 05l I ' . -
12' TRAILER $1295
Northwest Coach sleeps
6, fully equipped. Like
new, IS482 ) ·
'68 FORD
$1195 Custom. V-8, fact. a ir., R&H, P.S., P.B .. 1 YCU-55D I
'64 RIRD
$995 Custom '4 Or. Sed. V-8,
1ir cond., auto., R&H. IYWS426l Lo mllu9e.
'63 POllTIAC
$795 Grind Prix. Auto., R&H,
P.S., P.B.1 air cond. IJJV9201
VACATION SPECIALS
'64 DODGE
Dart 170 2 Or. Equip .. ped. 6 <yl., IPBY6051 $69 5 ;~~/!~~0¥~~; .~;:.; $1 .09 5 ------------P.S., R&H. IORN5441 ,.
'60 INTERKATIONAL $595 Pl<kup. Erl"''""· MUSTANGS! MUSTANGS! _18_82_0_18
_
1 ----------OVER A DOZEN BEAUTIFUL
'65 Pl YMOUTH Spon Fury 2 Or. H.T.
Green wlblack inter,
VS, auto:, PS. IYXS4 62l
R&H, P.S., P.B., P-w1n-
'65's -'66's-'67's-'68's
TO CHOOSE FROM.
Fastbacks -Har,ops-GT's
Exaonple: 1965 MUSTANG
V.8, po·wer steering, eutoma.ti_c·, radio, heater IOQU6851
REASONABLE RATES
RESERVE EARLY
FORD AUTHORIZED
LEASING SYSTEM
OPEN
7 DAYS
A
WEEK!
~~~l~~~~n~!!.,•ufo, $109 5
dows, factory air. IYCTl20I $1095
· '"r:::i':'f'! · ~, -·• "'· -Jfl!. .~ · f * 81/z acres of the most moderri Ford sales· and
. " l..l 7 ~ CSA/i1 ~ , ,.._~ a .r. •. ?1'1 · ' . f ~teq '-"'?,
r." . ii z ~ .. ; ,~t ~ S'NCE llf_/ ~ -'-.:: ~ ' 1921
j -£CJ.Sr HIGfflf~; I ~: ~>-SJ; .. ~ @eiJ
/.-... c=l .....,,, _.. ..._ .. ""1 MM.U IT'
' ,_.,.,,.. (OJ
2060 Harbor Costa Mesa @:> 642-0010 . ' .
" t I
) ' •
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